Fox
Hunt Operation
http://www.freeimages.com/photo/1259077
Beijing
looks at U.S. deal to recover dirty assets: China Daily
BEIJING/WASHINGTON Mon
Dec 29, 2014 4:53pm EST
(Reuters) - China is looking at signing an
agreement with the United States to target assets illegally taken out of China
by corrupt officials, a state-run newspaper said on Monday, as the government
tightens the screws in its anti-graft battle.
China
has vowed to pursue a search, dubbed Operation "Fox Hunt," beyond its
borders for corrupt officials and business executives, and their assets.
But
Western countries have balked at extradition deals with China, partly out of
concern about the integrity of its judicial system and treatment of prisoners.
Rights groups say authorities use torture, and the death penalty is common in
corruption cases.
The
China Daily said the central People's Bank of China was talking to the U.S.
Treasury Department's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) about an
agreement targeting ill-gotten assets in the United States.
FinCEN
spokesman Stephen Hudak declined to comment directly on whether negotiations
with China were underway. Hudak said the agency "often engages with
foreign partners to share information in order to protect the financial system
from money laundering, corruption, and terrorist finance."
U.S.
State Department spokesman Jeff Rathke said at a press briefing Monday that no
agreement was under consideration, but pointed to existing agreements that
touched on recovering criminal assets. "There's no additional agreement...
currently being considered," Rathke said.
Chinese
state media reported earlier in December that Beijing is set to finalize such a
deal with Canada.
The
central bank was also looking at a deal with Australia, the China Daily said,
citing Zhang Xiaoming, deputy head of the Finance Ministry's legal assistance
and foreign affairs department.
"After
the agreements are made, China will share intelligence with the U.S. and
Australia, which will also offer information to their enforcement agencies to
conduct further investigations," Zhang told the English-language paper.
Last
year FinCEN signed what it described as an "unprecedented" agreement
with Mexican authorities to share information that could help combat money
laundering to terrorist financing, focused on international criminal groups in
the U.S. and Mexico.
While
FinCEN receives and analyzes suspicious financial transaction data, and can
share that data with others, it does not have the ability to freeze funds. A
representative of the Justice Department, which would need to seek a court
order to freeze or seize assets, said U.S. and Chinese officials had discussed
the issue of recovering assets earlier in December. The representative declined
to provide further details.
(Reporting
by Ben Blanchard in Beijing and Aruna Viswanatha and David Brunnstrom in Washington; Additional reporting by Sui-Lee Wee; Editing by Robert Birsel and Grant McCool).
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