Advertisement
Advertisement
Taiwan
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
A file picture of telecom fraud suspects deported from Malaysia to mainland China last November. They included suspects from Taiwan. Photo: Handout

Taiwan protests after Vietnam deports fraud suspects to China

Taipei angered after several foreign governments have sent Taiwanese crime suspects to the mainland in recent months

Taiwan

Taiwan on Tuesday strongly objected to the deportation of four Taiwanese nationals suspected of telecommunications fraud from Vietnam to mainland China, saying the move was carried out under pressure from Beijing.

The latest deportation followed a series of similar cases this year where Taiwanese nationals in Kenya, Malaysia, Armenia and Cambodia have been arrested for alleged involvement in cross-border telecom scam groups and sent to the mainland.

The deportations arose from the “one-China” policy of most countries under which they maintain formal relations only with the People’s Republic of China rather than Taiwan, a self-ruled island that Beijing regards as a Chinese renegade province.

The four suspects, along with one Chinese citizen, were arrested in the northern Vietnamese city of Haiphong in December. Despite repeated requests from Taiwan envoys in Vietnam to have the four deported to Taiwan, they were “forcibly” sent to the mainland, Taiwan’s foreign ministry said.

“China said that in this case the victims were mostly in China and demanded Vietnam to repatriate all of the suspects to China (based on a bilateral legal treaty), obstructing our efforts to understand the case and visit the Taiwanese suspects,” it said in a statement.

Taiwan’s China policymaker, the Mainland Affairs Council, urged Beijing on Tuesday to open dialogue as soon as possible, saying its actions were unhelpful in tracing the source of the cross-border fraud groups and affected mutual trust in joint Chinese-Taiwanese crime fighting efforts.

Beijing has suspended dialogue with Taipei since June, a month after independence-leaning Tsai Ing-wen took office.

Tsai has refused to accept Beijing’s “one China” principle that deems Taiwan a part of mainland China.

According to Mainland Affairs Council officials, there are over 200 Taiwanese suspected of telecom fraud who have been deported from third countries to mainland China this year.

Chinese authorities have sought to contain an explosion of telecom crime it says has led to huge financial losses, with callers often impersonating officials and preying on the elderly, students or the unemployed.

The fraud has spread overseas, with Chinese speakers recruited in neighbouring self-ruled Taiwan increasingly setting up operations in East Africa or Southeast Asia.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Taipei protests as Vietnam sends suspects to mainland
Post