In 2008, the Chinese Academy
of Social Sciences estimated that up to 18,000 Communist Party cadres
suspected of corruption had fled China since 1990. The US-based Global
Financial Integrity group calculated in 2013 that US$1.08 trillion was
illegally transferred out of China in the years 2002–11.
Since coming to power in
November 2012, General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party Xi Jinping has
instigated one of the most extensive anti-corruption campaigns in the Party’s
history. A high-profile aspect of Xi’s corruption crackdown is the
unprecedented extent to which China is trying to repatriate and prosecute
corrupt officials who have left the country.
The Chinese state media
describe Australia as a ‘haven for escaping sin’. Along with the US and Canada,
Australia is one of the top three destinations for Chinese bureaucrats
escaping abroad. Even ‘China’s biggest fugitive’ — former power grid boss Gao
Yan, charged with awarding government contracts worth hundreds of millions of
renminbi to family and friends — still calls Australia home, probably because
of its high quality-of-life, robust economy and lack of an extradition treaty
with China.
China is now pressuring
Australia to repatriate ex-officials that it accuses of corruption. In July
2014, the Party launched Operation Fox Hunt to ‘pursue fugitives and pursue
stolen money’ abroad. By the end of 2014, Operation Fox Hunt had led to the
arrest of 680 cadres hiding in 69 countries and had
recovered over 3 billion renminbi (US$480 million).
In October 2014, the
Australian Federal Police confirmed that they were participating in Operation
Fox Hunt by helping China freeze and seize the assets of corruption suspects on
a jointly-agreed ‘priority list’. But the operation has yet to see a single
person repatriated from Australia.
China is pressuring
Australia to revive a bilateral extradition treaty that was signed by the
Howard government in 2007 but never ratified by the Australian parliament.
During Xi Jinping’s state visit in November 2014, a Chinese diplomat said that the Abbott government
had promised to ‘speed up the ratification process’. In April 2015, China
increased the pressure on Australia and other countries to extradite corruption
suspects by publishing the details of 100 bureaucrats for whom
China has issued Interpol arrest warrants. It claims that ten of them reside in
Australia.
Both Australian Foreign
Minister Julie Bishop and the Attorney-General’s Department have confirmed that
they are considering a bilateral extradition treaty that dovetails with
Operation Fox Hunt. Yet the Australian authorities have made no comment on
whether China has already made extradition requests under co-signed United
Nations anti-corruption treaties.
Perhaps Australian officials
are reticent because extraditions to China could be politically sensitive.
Australia cannot guarantee that returnees will enjoy due legal process or have
their rights respected. In China, corruption can be punished by death,
confessions are often extracted under duress, judges are party functionaries
and the conviction rate is an impressive 99 per cent. Moreover, Xi Jinping’s
anti-corruption purge is overseen by the Central Committee for Discipline
Inspection, itself an unaccountable party organ.
The extradition of corrupt
cadres to China therefore contradicts Australia’s commitment to upholding human
rights and the rule of law, both of which are ‘underlying principle[s] of
Australia’s engagement with the international community’. Such extraditions
would represent an Australian government endorsement of a Chinese justice
system that has routinely denied basic legal protections to such Australian
defendants as Stern Hu, Charlotte Chou and Matthew Ng.
This does not mean that
Australia must remain a haven for corrupt communist cadres. The prosecution of
Kai Cheung Li is a case in point.
As a state-employed property
developer in Guangdong province, Li redirected AU$2.8 million (US$2.14 million)
of public funds allocated for low-income housing to his wife in Brisbane. He
was put under investigation in September 2003, and absconded to Australia
shortly thereafter. In October 2005, China’s Supreme People’s Procuratorate
authorised the Guangdong authorities to request that the Australian police
scrutinise Li’s assets.
The Guangdong authorities
supplied the Australians with voluminous evidence of Li’s malfeasance. The
Australian and the Chinese authorities agreed to indict Li for money laundering
and dealing in the proceeds of crime. In 2007, the Australian police seized the
Li family’s assets and the Brisbane Supreme Court sentenced Li to 14 years’ jail
in 2011.
While Australia should by
all means cooperate with China to investigate corrupt Chinese officials, it
must insist that they are prosecuted on Australian soil. This will guarantee
the legal rights of defendants and ensure that the evidence collected by the
Chinese authorities is evaluated by an independent judicial system.
The Communist Party’s
Central Committee for Discipline Inspection has recently declared that
‘prosecution abroad’ is a legitimate way to pursue its aims. This is part of an
expanded anti-corruption campaign called Operation Sky Net that was launched in March 2015.
China is now willing to ‘provide evidential
material’ so that charges can be laid ‘according to the laws of [another]
country’.
China’s wily ‘foxes’ might
be fair game, but — like the crooked Kai Cheung Li — they also deserve a fair
go in court. Prosecuting corrupt Chinese cadres in Australia is how the
Australian government can support China’s anti-corruption campaign without
compromising its fundamental values.
Neil Thomas is a Morrison
Scholar at the Australian Centre on China in the World (CIW), ANU. This article
is based on his research for The Australia–China Story Archive, a CIW project
on bilateral relations.
No comments:
Post a Comment