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China urges corruption fugitives living abroad to return in exchange for lenient treatment

Official notice offers corrupt officials who have absconded overseas with ill-gotten gains leniency if they return to China before December 1, if not they will face harsh justice

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Former security chief Zhou Yongkang, under investigation for for possible “serious violations of party discipline” on the cover of China Daily. Photo: Reuters

The authorities in Beijing are urging officials who have fled abroad to avoid corruption charges to turn themselves in before December 1 in exchange for leniency or face stiffer punishment.

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Corruption is rampant in China, and a large number of government officials and executives of state-owned companies have absconded to safe havens overseas with their ill-gained wealth because China lacks extradition treaties.

Friday’s notice was jointly issued by the ministries of public security and foreign affairs, the supreme court and the supreme prosecuting office. It says those who should return willingly could get leniency and even get exonerated if they can help recover the financial losses.

Those who fail to turn themselves in by the deadline will face stiffer punishment, the notice says, although it does not offer details.

The government of President Xi Jinping is in the midst of the latest in a series of anti-graft crackdowns dating back two decades. Leaders of the ruling Communist Party have warned repeatedly that the pervasive corruption has eroded public trust in the party rule and threatened its legitimacy, and Xi has vowed to punish both “tigers and flies,” regardless of the ranks of the officials suspected of graft.

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In July, the Communist Party announced an investigation of a former member of its powerful Politburo Standing Committee, Zhou Yongkang, for possible “serious violations of party discipline” – a term usually used by officials to describe corruption.

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