Yahoo – AFP,
8 Nov 2014
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Visitors
walk past a sign promoting the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation
(APEC) summit
in Beijing on November 8, 2104 (AFP Photo/Wang Zhao)
|
Beijing
(AFP) - China secured backing from Asia-Pacific ministers Saturday to deepen
anti-graft efforts, in a move that dovetails with a high-profile Communist
Party "fox hunt" for corrupt officials who have fled abroad.
The
anti-corruption proposal is said to have been pushed by China and backed by the
United States at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) gathering in
Beijing, which culminates in a two-day summit of leaders from 21
member-economies starting Monday.
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China's
President Xi Jinping speaks to
other leaders at a meeting on the
sidelines of
the Asia-Pacific Economic
Cooperation (APEC) Summit in Beijing
on November 8,
2014 (AFP Photo/Kim
Kyung-Hoon)
|
"Corruption
not only creates an unfair playing field, it not only distorts economic
relationships, but corruption also steals from the people of every country the
belief that the system can work for everybody," he told reporters in
Beijing.
But it
remained unclear how effective the move would be, amid apprehension in some
countries over returning suspects to China due to fears they could be subject
to abuse and denied legal due process.
China in
July launched its so-called "Fox Hunt" -- a campaign to bring back
corrupt officials or their family members who have moved abroad, taking
ill-gotten gains with them.
Since
taking office last year, President Xi Jinping has made the graft fight a
central theme of his administration as public anger swells over widespread
corruption.
A report
attributed to China's central bank and leaked three years ago said that as many
as 18,000 corrupt officials had left the country between the 1990s and 2008,
taking as much as $123 billion with them.
'Deny
safe haven'
In a statement,
APEC ministers pledged to step up nascent anti-corruption efforts with a
regional commitment to "deny safe haven to those engaged in corruption,
including through extradition".
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Regional
leaders gather in Beijing on November 8, 2014 for the Asia-Pacific
Economic
Cooperation (APEC) Summit in the Chinese capital (AFP Photo/
Kim Kyung-Hoon)
|
But they
stressed that such moves would be "subject to domestic laws and
policies" and needed to be carried out "in accordance with
fundamental legal principles of each economy".
"We,
APEC member economies, recognise that corruption impedes economic
sustainability and development, threatens social security and fairness,
undermines the rule of law, and erodes government accountability, as well as public
trust," the statement said.
It pledged
to establish an office for the day-to-day running of the APEC Network of
Anti-Corruption Authorities and Law Enforcement Agencies (ACT-NET), a body
coordinating anti-corruption efforts that was launched by Chinese and US
officials in August.
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China's President Xi Jinping (C) speaks to
other leaders attending the Dialogue On
Strengthening Connectivity Partnership in
Beijing on November 8, 2014 (AFP Photo/
Kim Kyung-Hoon)
|
Anti-corruption
efforts with the ruling Communist Party are carried out by an internal body
which operates without any legal oversight, and there is concern that the
crackdown may be used for political faction-fighting.
APEC
Secretariat Executive Director Alan Bollard said Thursday the proposal had been
championed by China and the United States.
Bollard
said any anti-corruption effort "needs to happen within the different laws
and legal structures" of APEC members, but the statement did not spell out
how this would work.
"Corruption
impedes economic sustainability and development, threatens social security and
fairness," the ministers added.
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