China has always been committed to international cooperation in
fighting against corruption and is ready to push forward the
efforts, Justice Minister Zhang
Fusen said Saturday at a United Nations conference in
Bangkok.
"Chinese law enforcement authorities have long put the priority
on anti-corruption and achieved remarkable results in recent
years," said Zhang in a speech to the 11th United Nations Crime
Prevention and Criminal Justice Congress held in Bangkok.
In a bid to further crack down on corruption and other forms of
crime, the Chinese government also reached for international
cooperation in related fields, said Zhang.
China has ratified the UN Convention against Transnational
Organized Crime and signed the UN Convention against Corruption,
signed 71 bilateral justice cooperation instruments with 47
countries, had agreements on extradition with 23 countries and been
a member of more than 20 international justice cooperation
conventions, according to Zhang.
"We also called on UN member states to speed up their adoption
and implementation of the anti-corruption convention and the
convention against transnational organized crime," he
said.
The Chinese government is ready to use the two instruments as basis
for international cooperation in fields of extradition, seeking and
returning embezzled assets and cross-border sample collection, he
said.
On the domestic level, the legislature authorities are working
to draft a law against money laundering, according to Zhang.
How to fight against corruption, transnational organized crime,
economic and financial crime and terrorism through international
cooperation are major topics being discussed at the UN crime
prevention congress, which is being held in Bangkok from April 18
to 25.
(Xinhua News Agency April 24, 2005)