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BEIJING, March 27 (Xinhua) -- Lian Rongguan, a former bank official and deputy mayor of Renqiu City in North China's Hebei Province, was arrested at his hide-out in the coastal city of Yantai, in eastern Shandong Province, last month after he fled with a huge amount of
public money.
Lian is one of over 400 runaways who have been
captured by Chinese authorities in a new campaign to hunt former government
officials who have pocketed public money and possessions and gone into exile.
The new round of hunting for these runaways, the
second in the past five years since 2001, was triggered by a 2005 report by the
anti-corruption bureau of the Supreme People's Procuracy, which says more than
4,000 grafted officials were in exile.
The failure to arrest these officials swiftly may be
detrimental to the efforts to create a harmonious socialist society in China the
foundation of the ruling Communist Party of China (CPC), says the report.
In fact, it has been a regular job for procurators
and police to chase after these runaway officials. The authorities captured 596
suspects in 2003, 614 in 2004, and 703 in 2005, respectively, according to a
report by Jia Chunwang, procurator-general of the Supreme People's Procuracy at
the recent parliamentary session.
So far, the authorities have published the names of
these people on the Internet, which has obliged many runaways to give themselves
up and encouraged the general public to tip off law-enforcement departments.
In Henan Province, central China, local authorities
arrested 28suspects only 20 days after they publicized a list of 222 names.
This time, the authorities have published the cost of
capturing these hiding suspects. It costs 10,000 yuan (about 1,250 US dollars)
of public money to capture one of these runaways - it may cost 10 times higher
for major cases.
"Some cases may even cost 1 million yuan (about
125,000 US dollars) or more," said Wu Heping, spokesman for the Ministry of
Public Security, recently.
In some cities, people have been paid 3,000 yuan
(about 375 US dollars) after they gave information to the authorities about a
suspect.
Meanwhile, the authorities have confirmed that among
the 4,000 runaways, approximately 500 have gone into exile overseas, far less
than the figures reported by some media.
"They may have confused the number of corrupt
officials in hiding and the number of those in exile," said a procurator from
the Supreme People's Procuracy.
"We will chase after those who taken a large amount
of public money and have caused serious negative impacts at any cost," he said.
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