China gives U.S. list of ex-officials suspected of graft

World Today

In this Feb. 6, 2015 photo, a motorcyclist uses his mobile phone near a billboard showing Chinese President Xi Jinping with the slogan “To exactly solve the problem of corruption, we must hit both flies and tigers” in Gujiao in northern China’s Shanxi province. Chinese leaders have promised to generate new jobs by opening more of the state-dominated economy to private business. But they have yet to cut back monopolies and other privileges for politically favored government companies that reform advocates say are a drag on development. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

The Chinese government has provided a “priority” list to the United States of Chinese officials suspected of corruption and are believed to have fled there, a top state-run newspaper said on Wednesday.

Last year, Chinese officials said more than 150 “economic fugitives”, many of them described as corrupt government officials, were in the United States.

Xu Jinhui, head of the anti-graft bureau at the state prosecutor, told the official China Daily that “a priority list of alleged Chinese corrupt officials” believed to be at large in the United States has been provided to U.S. authorities.

Most suspected corrupt officials overseas either worked for the government or state-owned enterprises and took bribes or embezzled public funds, Xu said.

The report did not elaborate.

Senior U.S. officials will meet their Chinese counterparts in August to discuss the possibility of repatriating Chinese officials who have fled to the United States with billions of dollars of allegedly stolen government assets, a U.S. official said last month.

Xu added that Chinese authorities will start legal procedures to confiscate assets overseas, the newspaper said.

“Once in possession of solid evidence, we will initiate confiscation procedures according to the law,” he said, again without elaborating.

The United States may deport to China the ex-wife of a fugitive Chinese official indicted on money laundering and immigration fraud charges, a U.S. prosecutor said last week.

But there is no extradition treaty between the two countries.

Liu Dong, head of the Chinese Ministry of Public Security’s economic crimes division, told the China Daily that U.S. authorities are prejudiced against China’s legal system and “mistakenly believe we would undertake unfair prosecution of suspects”.

The Chinese government has launched a campaign, dubbed Operation Fox Hunt, to hunt down officials and businessmen who have absconded, often taking their ill-gotten gains with them, part of President Xi Jinping’s battle against deep-seated graft.

Separately, state news agency Xinhua said Xu Gang, the deputy governor of southern Fujian province, has been sacked after authorities launched a corruption investigation.

Xinhua, citing the Communist Party’s central Organisation Department, said the government has removed Xu’s “leadership position” as he is being investigated for suspected serious breaches of party discipline and the law, the usual euphemism the government uses for graft. The article did not give more details and it was not possible to contact Xu for comment.

Story by Reuters.