China Says Over 150 Economic Fugitives at Large
in the U.S.
By
Sui-Lee Wee
BEIJING Mon Aug 11, 2014 6:27am EDT
(Reuters) -
More than 150 economic fugitives, many of whom are corrupt officials
or suspected of graft in
China,
are at large in the United States, Chinese state media said on Monday,
citing a senior official from the public security ministry.
The United States "has become the top destination for Chinese
fugitives fleeing the law," the
China
Daily newspaper said, citing Liao Jinrong, director general of the
ministry's International Cooperation Bureau.
Chinese President Xi Jinping has made fighting pervasive graft a
central theme and has warned, like others before him, that corruption
threatens the Communist Party's survival.
Beijing has long grappled
with the issue of so-called "naked officials" - government workers whose
husbands, wives or children are all overseas - who use foreign family
connections to illegally shift assets out of China or to avoid
investigation. Some estimates put the number of Chinese officials and
family members moving assets offshore at more than 1 million in the past
five years.
But bringing these fugitives back to China isn't easy. There is
no extradition treaty between China and the United States, and foreign
governments have expressed reluctance to hand over Chinese suspects as
they could face the death penalty in China.
"We face practical difficulties in getting fugitives who fled to
the United States back to face trial due to the lack of an extradition
treaty and the complex and lengthy procedures," the China Daily cited
Liao as saying.
"FOX HUNT"
China's Public Security Ministry is trying to set up an annual
high-level meeting with U.S. judicial authorities, including the
Department of Homeland Security, the China Daily said, citing Wang Gang,
a senior official at the International Cooperation Bureau.
Last month, China launched what it called a "fox hunt" for
corrupt officials, saying it will track down fugitives around the world
and punish them.
"This is a new message that the current administration is sending
to the public," said Zhu Jiangnan, an assistant politics professor at
the University of Hong Kong, who specializes in corruption in China. "In
past years, the government didn't say very explicitly they will get
corrupt officials back to China."
A case highlighting the problems of extradition is Lai Changxing,
once China's most-wanted fugitive, who fled to Canada with his family in
1999 and claimed refugee status saying allegations that he ran a
multibillion-dollar smuggling operation in the southeastern Chinese city
of Xiamen were politically motivated. His case triggered tensions
between Beijing and Ottawa. Canada eventually deported Lai in 2011, and
he was jailed for life the following year.
Only two people have been
brought home from the United States to China to stand trial in the past
decade, the China Daily said, citing ministry figures. It's difficult
for China to apprehend fugitives because U.S. judicial authorities
"misunderstand the Chinese judicial system and procedures,, the
newspaper said, citing experts. "They always think Chinese judicial
organs violate suspects' human rights," it quoted Wang as saying.
Globally, 320 suspects in corruption cases were "seized and
brought back to China" in the first half of this year, state news agency
Xinhua said in July.
In March, China's top prosecutor, Cao Jianming, said more than 10
billion yuan ($1.65 billion) in "dirty money" and property was recovered
and 762 corruption suspects were captured at home or abroad last year.
Since the mid-1990s, an estimated 16,000-18,000 party officials,
businessmen and other individuals have "disappeared" from China,
according to a People's Bank of China report prepared in 2008 - taking
with them an estimated 800 billion yuan.
(1 US dollar = 6.1528 Chinese yuan)
(Additional reporting by Matthew Miller; Editing by
Michael Perry and
Ian Geoghegan)