China issued a new law that allows officials to chase fraudulent criminals abroad, requiring domestic telecommunications and banking companies to cooperate.

The National Assembly Standing Committee on September 2, passing the Law on Anti -Telecommunications and Telecommunications, is expected to take effect from December.

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Photo: Reuters

Overseas organizations or individuals committing frauds via telecommunications network may be handled and responsible according to the new laws and documents of China said.

Chinese police rehearsed in Shanghai in 2014. Photo: Reuters.

The new law also requires the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Police to cooperate more closely with international executive agencies to raid scanning fraudulent criminals.

Online cheating to appropriate property is becoming a painful problem for China and many Asian countries.

The fraudulent industry gains so much illicit profits that this model turns the general into a cross -border trafficking, using a high wage trick to drag foreigners into the fraud system and expand the list of prey.

Over the past few weeks, police in mainland China, Hong Kong special zone, Taiwan Island, South Korea and Southeast Asian countries have cooperated to rescue hundreds of victims tricked to call and text centers.

The Chinese Ministry of Public Security said from May 2021 to October 2021 blocked more than 20,000 people in this country trying to go to another to participate in fraudulent lines.

The Law on Anti -Telecommunications and Telecommunications Online also proposed to establish a national anti -fraud mechanism, assigned to the State Council to supervise and ensure coordination with the Ministry and Sector.

Telecommunications companies, banking, finance, online payment and network services in China are asked to share most of the responsibilities in anti -fraudulent efforts.

The law enforcement agency has the right to impose a ban on entry and exit for the suspects frequently going to hot spots that fraudulent criminals are often operating.

Over the past few years, fraud from phone and network has become serious and daring.

Wang Jiangyu, a law expert at Hong Kong City University (CityU), said that the fraud crime in China in recent years has moved its operations to Southeast Asian countries because of the domestic raiding pressure.

Casino cities are loose in Southeast Asia is considered a paradise for human trafficking lines and criminal activities.

Some facilities, casinos in Sihanoukville, Cambodian Casino capital, involving Chinese tycoons wanted by Beijing.