Organized crimes in the municipality have been given a heavy
blow in one of its largest campaign recently.
Prosecutors in the city have filed charges in the past week
against 103 suspects in 29 cases involving serious organized crime
and crimes of violence in public places, the Shanghai People's
Procuratorate announced yesterday.
A release from the procuratorate said the suspects are believed
to be taking part in organized crime, murder, intentional injury,
robbery, rape, drug selling and other crimes.
Zou Chuanji, spokesman for the procuratorate, said prosecutors
were stepping up the fight against these crimes "in consideration
of Shanghai's current security situation."
He added that they will spare no efforts to find out whoever
uses his or her power to support such organization and crime.
Ji Gang, prosecution department director for the procuratorate,
said officials were reviewing cases that involved suspects using
their power to support crime.
"But this is not the right time to release that information," Ji
said.
Organized crime has been on the rise in the past year in
Shanghai, the release said. For example, in 2003, 45 suspects in
four cases were accused of being involved large-sized organized
crimes. The number of such cases so far this year was already more
than 10.
Also, the Shanghai Zhabei District People's Court announced
yesterday a guilty verdict in one of those cases. Nine gang members
who conspired to organize gambling, extortion, conduct detention
and possess firearms were sentenced to prison terms of between four
and a half and 20 years.
The procuratorate also noted an obvious increase in organized
crime and violence conducted by suspects from abroad.
One case involved a fight in Shanghai after police said the
manager of a karaoke facility and his wife went to Macao last May
and compiled a gambling debt of 300,000 yuan (US$37,000).
The gambling place sent a woman surnamed Hua to Shanghai to
collect the debt, police said, and the resulting fight caused one
death and one serious injury last August 28.
Now participants in the fight face charges of mass crime and
intentional injury.
(China Daily April 12, 2006)