738 fugitives captured in China's 'Fox hunt 2015' campaign
Source:Xinhua Published: 2016-1-7 13:51:19
Six fugitives involvoed in economic crimes are taken back under escort from Indonesia at Capital International Airport in Beijing, capital of China, June 21, 2015. By the end of November 2015, a total of 738 suspects, including 18 "Red Notice" fugitives, have been captured overseas since China's "Fox hunt 2015" campaign began in April 2015. Thirty-two of them were seized over 10 years after they fled. (Xinhua/Li Mingfang)
Combination photo taken shows a file photo of Yang Xiuzhu in Wenzhou of east China's Zhejiang Province in 2002 (L) and Yang Xiuzhu's lawyer Vlad Kuzmin (3rd R) waits prior to Yang's hearing at an immigration court in New York, the United States, June 9, 2015 (R). The first hearing in the trial of China's most wanted economic fugitive Yang Xiuzhu took place in a New York immigration court on June 9. Yang, who went into hiding after being sought after by anti-corruption investigators in China, has been detained in the United States. Yang is one of the 100 Chinese nationals suspected of corruption who are believed to have fled abroad. She used to serve as vice mayor of Wenzhou, a coastal city in the eastern Zhejiang Province. When investigators started looking into her activities in 2003, she and her family fled China. By the end of November 2015, a total of 738 suspects, including 18 "Red Notice" fugitives, have been captured overseas since China's "Fox hunt 2015" campaign began in April 2015. Thirty-two of them were seized over 10 years after they fled. (Xinhua/Wang Lei)
Zhao Ruheng, an economic crime suspect, is escorted at Pudong Airport in Shanghai, east China, Nov. 1, 2015. Born in 1964, Zhao was the former chairman of textile company in Huimin County, east China's Shandong Province. He is suspected of invoice deception, tax evasion, conspiring with others to misuse public money, and embezzlement, according to the Communist Party of China's Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI). By the end of November 2015, a total of 738 suspects, including 18 "Red Notice" fugitives, have been captured overseas since China's "Fox hunt 2015" campaign began in April 2015. Thirty-two of them were seized over 10 years after they fled. (Xinhua/Chen Jin)
Graphics from the website of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection of the Communist Party of China shows the countries and regions where the Red Warrant suspects might flee to. By the end of November 2015, a total of 738 suspects, including 18 "Red Notice" fugitives, have been captured overseas since China's "Fox hunt 2015" campaign began in April 2015. Thirty-two of them were seized over 10 years after they fled. (Xinhua/Lu Zhe)
Zhao Shilan, ex-wife of fugitive Chinese official Qiao Jianjun, refuses to be photographed as she appeared at a court for indiction on money laundering and immigration fraud charges in California, the United States, May 18, 2015. Qiao Jianjun, a former official with a branch of China's government grain storage, and his ex-wife were indicted in the United States on money laundering and immigration fraud charges. By the end of November 2015, a total of 738 suspects, including 18 "Red Notice" fugitives, have been captured overseas since China's "Fox hunt 2015" campaign began in April 2015. Thirty-two of them were seized over 10 years after they fled. (Xinhua/Xue Ying)
Kuang Wanfang (R), an economic crime suspect, is escorted at Changle Airport in Fuzhou, capital of southeast China's Fujian Province, Sept. 24, 2015. The woman, who fled to the US in 2001, is suspected of taking part in corruption and bribery, and was repatriated to China. By the end of November 2015, a total of 738 suspects, including 18 "Red Notice" fugitives, have been captured overseas since China's "Fox hunt 2015" campaign began in April 2015. Thirty-two of them were seized over 10 years after they fled. (Xinhua/Yin Gang)