Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

China police crack down on US $ 30bn in undergroun­d banking

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Chinese police have busted undergroun­d banks that handled 200 billion yuan (US $ 30.2 billion) in illegal money transfers this year, the Ministry of Public Security (MPS) said yesterday.

Police said they arrested 450 suspects involved in 158 cases of undergroun­d banking and money laundering, according to a notice posted on the MPS official website.

Beijing has been fighting illegal cross-border outflows in an attempt to slow capital flight as its yuan currency weakens to near six-year lows.

A special task force, jointly launched by the MPS, the central bank, and the foreign exchange regulator, uncovered illicit banking services in 192 locations this year, the notice said.

Yesterday, China state broadcaste­r CCTV separately reported that police in the southern city of Shenzhen recently busted an undergroun­d bank that handled 30 billion yuan in transactio­ns over a sixyear period. Police arrested 26 major suspects in four different cities, the report said. The undergroun­d bank was disguised as a trade company.

“The key (problem) is that undergroun­d banks have become channels for drug dealers, smugglers, and economic criminals to transfer funds,” Shu Jianping, head of the anti-money laundering unit at the Ministry of Public Security, told CCTV.

Beijing started a campaign against illegal banking in April last year and uncovered over 170 cases of money laundering and illegal fund transfers involving more than 800 billion yuan as of last November.

The crackdown included an investigat­ion into the country’s biggest undergroun­d banking case involving US $ 64 billion worth of illegal transactio­ns.

Although the crackdown has curbed undergroun­d banking to some extent, illegal activities using those “grey capital” networks are still spreading and becoming more elusive as collusion between banks in different regions is rife, the notice said. Undergroun­d banks are channels for transferri­ng money obtained through illegal activity, including public funds embezzled by corrupt officials, an earlier Xinhua news agency report on the crackdown said.

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