Economy

China fights invoices-related crimes

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2010-11-25 06:28
Large Medium Small

BEIJING-- Chinese police have uncovered 12,900 cases of fake invoices-related crimes and confiscated 780 million fake invoices in their efforts to contain the spreading of economic crimes since 2008, the Ministry of Public Security said Wednesday.

Related readings:
China fights invoices-related crimes Fighting crime with a mystical mist
China fights invoices-related crimesCrime down in city's rental homes 
China fights invoices-related crimes Internet policing hinges on transnational cyber crime
China fights invoices-related crimesTeam work key to cyber crime 

Invoice-related crimes have seen a 20 percent increase year-on-year since 2003 in China and continue to undermine the country's taxation system as well as threatening state security, the ministry said in a statement.

Meanwhile, China's police have also been making greater efforts to fight crimes concerning bank cards to safeguard the country's financial order. Between January and October this year, China's police dealt with  19,000 cases of bank card-related crimes, and retrieved funds totaling 600 million yuan (about 90 million US dollars), according to the ministry.

The ministry, along with People's Bank of China, the central bank, launched a nationwide campaign against bank card-related crimes this January.

Since then, over 1,000 dens involved in illegal credit cards have been smashed. According to statistics issued by China UnionPay, an association for the country's banking card industry, the total number of bank cards issued in China reached over 2.1 billion as of the first half of 2010.

With bank cards being widely used, China saw rampant cases of fraudulent use of bank cards, including illegal cash advances at vendor terminals and unauthorized overdrafts.

Since 2009, China's police have investigated over 100,000 cases of economic crimes in commerce and trade and retrieved funds amounting to 20 billion yuan.