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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Shenzhen
Five SZ fugitives on Interpol’s list
     2015-April-24  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    AMONG the list of 100 people wanted by Interpol’s National Central Bureau of China worldwide, four of them are corrupt company executives and one is a police officer from Shenzhen.

    The list, published on China’s discipline watchdog’s website (ccdi.gov.cn), is complete with the suspects’ photos, ID and visa numbers, possible flight destinations and the crimes they allegedly committed.

    Among the five from Shenzhen is Zhu Haiping, 52, a former manager at Shenzhen Yuwei Industrial Co. Zhu, who fled to the U.S. in 1998, is wanted for embezzling 12 million yuan (US$1.96 million).

    Zhu, who also served as the chief of accounting at the Hubei Civil Aviation Administration, used his authority to have a man from the Tianhe Airport deposit 12 million yuan in a bank branch run by Lu Jianqiang. Lu forged documents showing the money had been deposited, but actually sent the money to Zhu.

    Zhang Yongguang, a former police officer with the Nanshan District Public Security Subbureau, is the youngest of the five. Zhang fled to the U.S. in December 2010 at age 28, after taking bribes of more than 1 million yuan.

    Zhang, a former officer at the Shenzhen High-tech Industrial Park Police Station, was bribed by a man he was investigating for corruption.

    Zhang withdrew 770,000 yuan through a bank card given to him by the man he was investigating and borrowed 150,000 yuan from the man’s wife in exchange for promises to help them. Zhang claimed to be going to the U.S. for holiday but never returned.

    Liu Baofeng, then general manager with the Shenzhen company Huatai Securities, fled to Canada in November 2001. He is wanted for the embezzlement of 70 million yuan in public funds. In 2002, Guangdong People’s Procuratorate declared Liu’s 70 million yuan embezzled as a record amount in China.

    The specific details of the alleged crimes of Xu Wei, a manager with Shenzhen Petroleum Development Import and Export Co., and Chang Zheng, formerly of the CNPC Equipment (Shenzhen) Import and Export Co., aren’t listed.

    In 2011, Xue fled to the U.S., and Chang fled to Canada. They are both wanted for embezzlement.

    Among the 100 Chinese fugitives, 16 are from Guangdong Province and half of them once worked in the lucrative petroleum and banking sectors.

    The fugitives include Liu Cangming, former president of the Bank of Communications Guangzhou Branch, and Lai Mingmin, former head of the Jiangmen branch of the Bank of China.

    Liu allegedly illegally gave loans of 9.8 billion yuan in three years. Liu fled to either Singapore or the U.S. in December 2007. (Han Ximin)

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