Kuwait Times

China arrests 1,100 over crypto laundering

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China has arrested more than a thousand people for using the profits from crime to buy cryptocurr­encies, security officials said, as part of a growing crackdown on the industry.

The country’s bitcoin mines power nearly 80 percent of the global trade in cryptocurr­encies, although trading in China is banned.

Officials have started to turn a sharp eye towards cryptocurr­ency miners to prevent speculatio­n and stamp out money laundering. Chinese police busted a network of 1,100 people involved in laundering money by buying cryptocurr­encies, the ministry of public security said in a statement dated Wednesday.

The launderers charged clients commission to convert illegal proceeds into virtual currencies via crypto exchanges, the ministry said, without outlining the amount of money involved.

China banned trading in cryptocurr­encies in 2019 and is increasing­ly tightening restrictio­ns on bitcoin mining. In April, the northern region of Inner Mongolia closed down all its cryptocurr­ency mines, claiming they failed to meet annual energy consumptio­n targets.

The region accounted for eight percent of the computing power needed to run the global blockchain-a set of online ledgers to record bitcoin transactio­ns.

That is higher than the amount of computing power dedicated to blockchain in the entire United States. The northweste­rn province of Qinghai announced a similar ban on cryptocurr­ency mining on Wednesday, but no data is available about the size of the operations in the region.

Bitcoin values tumbled in May on the back of a warning by Beijing to investors against speculativ­e trading in cryptocurr­encies. hina is in the midst of a widerangin­g regulatory crackdown on its fintech sector, whose biggest players have been hit with large fines after being found guilty of monopolist­ic practices. —AFP

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