Sunday, 17 April 2016
China criticises Taiwan over telephone fraud case
China has criticised Taiwan for releasing 20 people
suspected of being involved in a telephone fraud case
linked to mainland China.
They were part of a group of Taiwanese nationals arrested in
Malaysia and deported to Taiwan.
China said it wanted to prosecute them, but Taiwanese
officials said there was insufficient evidence.
Taiwan has protested after Kenya deported to China 45
Taiwanese nationals accused of the same crime.The latest case began in Malaysia, which last month arrested
119 people suspected of being involved in a number of
telephone scams. Just over half the suspects were from
China, and more than 50 were from Taiwan.
China's Xinhua state news agency said the fraudsters
pretended to be law enforcement officers in order to extort
money from their victims, many of them from mainland
China.
China wanted them returned, saying its people had been
defrauded. Taiwan said they were its citizens and so should
be sent home.
A batch of 20 Taiwanese suspects were eventually sent to
Taiwan - and immediately released.
The Taiwanese authorities said there was not enough
evidence to prosecute, although they said they had asked
China to provide information."By releasing the suspects, [the] Taiwan authorities
disregarded many victims' interests and harmed them a
second time," a spokesman for the Taiwan Affairs Office -
China's Taiwan policy body - was quoted by Xinhua as
saying.
He said Taiwan should seriously pursue wrongdoers.
About 30 Taiwanese suspects involved in this case are still in
Malaysia awaiting a decision on where they should be
deported to.
One-China policy
Chinese authorities have said they have jurisdiction over the
group of Taiwanese who were deported from Kenya.
State council and security officials said the Taiwanese were
part of a telecoms fraud ring who cost mainland victims
billions of yuan.
Taiwan said they were forced on board a plane by Kenyan
police wielding rifles and tear gas.
It said the deportation amounted to "extrajudicial
abduction" and called for the group's release.
But China has said some of these suspects have already
admitted what they have done.
China also praised Kenya for supporting its "one-China
policy".
Beijing views Taiwan - self-ruling since 1950 - as a
breakaway region that must be reunited with the mainland.
It insists that other countries cannot recognise both China
and Taiwan, with the result that Taiwan has formal
diplomatic ties with only a few countries. Taiwan does not
have formal diplomatic relations with Kenya or Malaysia.
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