Kuwait Times

Interpol saga hurts China’s bid to lead global bodies

Beijing’s internatio­nal image takes a self-inflicted bruising

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BEIJING: Beijing’s internatio­nal image took a selfinflic­ted bruising with a secretive investigat­ion into the former Chinese head of Interpol, highlighti­ng its ruthless tactics even as it seeks global goodwill in a trade spat with the United States, analysts said. The election of Meng Hongwei as head of Interpol in 2016 was a triumph for President Xi Jinping’s bid to burnish China’s internatio­nal profile through leadership posts in prestigiou­s global organizati­ons.

But midway through his four-year term, Meng vanished after travelling to China from France, where Interpol is based. After days of silence, authoritie­s accused him of taking bribes and he resigned. The Chinese vice public security minister’s abrupt disappeara­nce late last month caught Interpol offguard, an embarrassi­ng situation for an organizati­on whose mission is internatio­nal police cooperatio­n. It was also a stark reminder to the world of the Communist Party’s harsh investigat­ive tactics, which contrast with the due process and open court system afforded to suspects in democratic countries.

China has said that Meng’s fall from grace is evidence that no one is above the law. But critics who see Xi’s sixyear anti-corruption campaign as a tool to root out his political enemies are sceptical. “This will have a detrimenta­l impact on China’s soft power,” said Willy Lam, politics professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. “It plays into the Americans’ hands, adding more fodder to US attacks against China and the lack of rule of law,” he said, referring to Vice President Mike Pence’s searing speech last week assailing China’s human rights record, foreign policies and trade practices.

Seemingly kept in the dark by China, French police opened an investigat­ion into his disappeara­nce and Interpol asked for a “clarificat­ion” from Beijing on Saturday. But it was not until Monday that Chinese authoritie­s revealed that Meng was being investigat­ed for taking bribes, without providing details about the charges or his whereabout­s.

In one ominous sign, several posts on meetings and activities Meng participat­ed in over recent years disappeare­d from the public security ministry’s website Monday as an AFP reporter viewed them-effectivel­y erasing him from the agency’s history. Adding to the intrigue, his wife Grace Meng spoke with her face hidden from cameras in Lyon on Sunday, telling reporters she did not know what had happened to her husband and showing his last text message to her: a knife emoji signaling danger.

No one is above the law: Beijing

‘No exceptions’

The organ investigat­ing Meng, the National Supervisor­y Commission, can hold suspects for as long as six months without providing access to legal counsel. Xi’s anti-graft campaign has punished more than one million officials, and is popular with citizens who are fed up with endemic corruption. But some analysts say it also enables the Chinese president to eliminate rivals. One of the most powerful to fall was former security ministry chief Zhou Yongkang, who promoted Meng more than a decade ago and was sentenced to life in prison in 2014.

The public security ministry said Meng’s case shows “that no one is above the law” and underscore­s the need to “thoroughly eliminate the pernicious influence of Zhou Yongkang”. The state-run Global Times cited Tuesday a professor from a Communist Party school as saying that Meng’s crimes might not be just related to corruption but that he could also have “jeopardize­d national security”. Lam speculated that the anti-graft agency may have discovered something that sowed doubts about Meng’s allegiance­s, and “Xi needs absolute loyalty”.

Beijing’s handling of the case will make it harder for Chinese to take prominent spots at global bodies in the future, Lam said. Bonnie Glaser, senior Asia adviser at Washington’s Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, said internatio­nal organizati­ons “should think twice going forward before considerin­g a Chinese candidate to be its head.” “Unless Interpol presses for an open investigat­ion and due process for Meng Hongwei, it is definitely going to be criticized. How can the world’s police organizati­on simply do nothing?” — AFP

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 ??  ?? LYON: Grace, the wife of the missing Interpol president Meng Hongwey, talks to journalist­s in Lyon during a press conference. —AFP
LYON: Grace, the wife of the missing Interpol president Meng Hongwey, talks to journalist­s in Lyon during a press conference. —AFP
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