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| Gao Feng, deputy director of Bureau on
Economic Crime under the Ministry of Public Security, speaks at a press
conference on Tuesday, May 9, 2006. |
BEIJING, May 9 (Xinhua) -- Chinese police have
arrested 20,500 people involved in 2,848 cases of illegal pyramid selling from
2001 to 2005, the police authority said on Tuesday.
"After spreading nationwide, pyramid selling has
developed into a serious crime," said Gao Feng, deputy director of the Bureau on
Economic Crime under the Ministry of Public Security.
Gao told a press conference that more than 4.21
billion yuan (519.8 million U.S. dollars) was involved in the 2,848 cases.
"Illegal pyramid selling is a severe economic crime
that poisons people's minds, damages the economy and threatens efforts to build
a moderately prosperous society," Gao said.
Pyramid selling was introduced in China in the 1990s.
Since then, some people have sold fake and inferior-quality goods through
illegal pyramid selling means.
In 1998, the State Council issued a notice
prohibiting all kinds of pyramid selling in China. But in recent years, pyramid
selling has reappeared, prompting a crackdown by the Ministry of Public Security
last year.
Since last May, Chinese police have uncovered 516
illegal pyramid selling cases and arrested 3,408 criminal suspects.
Gao said most people involved in pyramid selling are
migrant workers, laid-off workers and other low-income citizens. Some government
and Party officials and students also participated in the illegal activity.
However most people involved could not earn money at all. Some even went
bankrupt and became vagrants.
Chinese police arrest Koreans in pyramid selling
scheme
Chinese police have arrested four Republic of Korea
citizens after breaking the first foreign-organized pyramid selling network,
seizing more than 13 million yuan (1.6 million US dollars).
The Ministry of Public Security said in a statement
Tuesday that the scheme involved about 1,800 people selling cosmetics and
sportswear in east China's coastal city Qingdao.
The alleged gang leader, surnamed Lee, and three
others established the network in June 2004, requiring each participant to
recruit five other people in the level below from whom they took commissions.
In Dec. 2004, the gang also registered a department
store and a clothing company, which operated illegally by charging a 2,000 yuan
membership fee and offering members a commission to recruit shoppers.
The Qingdao procuratorate is preparing to prosecute
the four culprits. Enditem |