Oversight on antiques trade tightened
China's authorities have tightened oversight on auction houses, antiques markets, short-video platforms and second-hand online trading sites to tackle the black market trade of cultural relics.
They aim to raise the bar for legal entry for the trade of antiques and art, improving the scrutiny of sources and focusing on eliminating irregularities in related sectors, Luo Qingdong, deputy head of the first procuratorial office of the Supreme People's Procuratorate, said at a news conference on Monday in Beijing.
From January 2021 to September, procuratorates nationwide approved the arrest of 3,192 people and prosecuted 5,020 people over obstructing the management of cultural relics, said Luo.
Such crimes are well-organized, and include illegal excavation and theft, selling and smuggling. The cultural relics are traded frequently, making evidence collection difficult, he said.
"While working on such cases, prosecutors need to guide investigative agencies to apprehend suspects and simultaneously trace the whereabouts of the stolen cultural relics, and promote their repatriation," he said.
Luo said procuratorial authorities also push for leniency when suspects plead guilty, encouraging them to confess and return stolen relics.
Public interest litigation has also been used to tackle cases that damaged public interests, and to close loopholes in cultural relics management, he said.
From January last year to September, procuratorial organs across the country handled 11,402 public interest litigation cases in the field of cultural relics and cultural heritage protection, according to the SPP.
Chen Peijun, head of the supervision and inspection division of the National Cultural Heritage Administration, said that apart from regulations issued by the central government, more than 200 local regulations on cultural relics protection have been enacted.
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