A top Chinese police
official was elected president of Interpol on Thursday, setting off alarm bells
among rights advocates over abuses and a lack of transparency within China's
legal system, as well as the potential misuse of the police organization to
attack Beijing's political opponents.
Associated
Press report continues:
Vice
Public Security Minister Meng Hongwei was named as the first Chinese to hold
the post at the organization's general assembly on the Indonesian island of
Bali, Interpol announced in a press release.
The
Lyon, France-based International Criminal Police Organization has 190 member
nations and has the power to issue "red notices." It's the closest
instrument to an international arrest warrant in use today. Interpol circulates
those notices to member countries listing people who are wanted for
extradition.
While
Interpol's charter officially bars it from undertaking "any intervention
or activities of a political, military, religious or racial character,"
critics say some governments, primarily Russia and Iran, have abused the system
to harass and detain opponents of their regimes. Interpol says it has a special
vetting process to prevent that from happening.
Quoted
in the Interpol release, Meng said he takes over at a time when the world is
facing some of the most serious global public security challenges since World
War II.
"Interpol,
guided by the best set of principles and mechanisms to date, has made a
significant contribution to promoting international police cooperation,"
Meng was quoted as saying. "Interpol should continue to adhere to these
principles and strategies, while further innovating our work mechanisms in
order to adapt to the changing security situation we see today."
Interpol's
president is a largely symbolic but still influential figure who heads its
executive committee responsible for providing guidance and direction and
implementing decisions made by its general assembly. Interpol Secretary-General
Jurgen Stock is the organization's chief full-time official and heads the
executive committee.
Meng,
who takes over from Mireille Ballestrazzi of France for a four-year term, will
assume his new duties immediately.
His
election comes as Chinese President Xi Jinping is seeking to give new momentum
to his 4-year-old campaign against corruption, including a push to seek the
return of former officials and other suspects who had fled abroad. China filed
a list of 100 of its most-wanted suspects with Interpol in April 2014, about
one third of whom have since been repatriated to face justice at home.
The
anti-corruption drive is led by the Communist Party's internal watchdog body,
the highly secretive Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, rather than
the police, prompting questions about its transparency and fairness.
More
than 1 million officials have been handed punishments ranging from lengthy
prison terms to administrative demerits or demotions. While authorities deny
their targets are selected for political purposes, several of the
highest-profile suspects have been associated with Xi's predecessor Hu Jintao
and other rivals.
China's
police and judicial systems have been routinely criticized for abuses,
including confessions under torture, arbitrary travel bans and the
disappearance and detention without charges of political dissidents and their
family members. That has prompted reluctance among many Western nations to sign
extradition treaties with China or return suspects wanted for non-violent
crimes.
China
also stands accused of abducting independent book sellers who published tomes
on sensitive political topics from Hong Kong and Thailand. U.S. officials have
meanwhile complained that China has asked for the return of corruption suspects
while providing little or no information about the allegations against them.
Given
those circumstances, Meng's election is an "alarming prospect," said
Maya Wang, Hong Kong-based researcher with Human Rights Watch.
"While
we think it's important to fight corruption, the campaign has been politicized
and undermines judicial independence," Wang said. Meng's election
"will probably embolden and encourage abuses in the system," she
said, citing recent reports of close Chinese ally Russia's use of Interpol to
attack President Vladimir Putin's political opponents.
Nicholas
Bequelin, Amnesty International's regional director for East Asia, tweeted:
"This is extraordinarily worrying given China's longstanding practice of
trying to use Interpol to arrest dissidents and refugees abroad."
At
the same time, China's 3-decade-old economic boom has produced waves of
embezzlement, bribery, corruption and other forms of white-collar crime that
have forced the government to spread a wide net to track down suspects and
their illicit earnings. China also says it faces security threats from
cross-border extremist Islamic groups seeking to overthrow Chinese rule over
the far-western region of Xinjiang.
Interpol
member countries nominate officials for the post of president. Presidents are
elected in a vote by members on a one country, one vote basis. There was one
other candidate for president but the vote is always closed and results are not
released publicly.
Along
with electing Meng, Interpol also approved a call for the "systematic
collection and recording of biometric information as part of terrorist
profiles" shared by the organization.
About 830 police chiefs and senior law enforcement officials from 164 countries joined in the four-day meeting. China became a member in 1984.
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