Meng Hongwei: China confirms detention of Interpol chief
China has confirmed it is holding the missing head of
Interpol, Meng Hongwei.
Beijing said he was under investigation by the country's
anti-corruption body for unspecified breaches of the law.
Mr Meng, also a vice-minister of public security in China,
was reported missing after travelling from the city of Lyon in France, where
Interpol is based, to China on 25 September.
Interpol said it had received his resignation from the
presidency on Sunday with immediate effect.
China's National Supervision Commission, which handles
corruption cases involving public servants, said Mr Meng was under
investigation in a statement on its website.
Mr Meng is the latest high-profile disappearance in China,
where a number of top government officials, billionaires and even an A-list
celebrity have vanished in recent months.
Earlier
this week, actress Fan Bingbing, who disappeared in China in July,
emerged with a public apology and a fine of 883 million yuan ($129m; £98.9m)
for tax evasion and other offences.
What has Interpol said?
In a
statement on its Twitter site, it said it had received the resignation
with immediate effect.
Under its terms it has appointed senior vice-president Kim
Jong-yang of South Korea as acting president.
A new president will be elected for the remaining two years
of Mr Meng's mandate at the general assembly in Dubai next month.
On Saturday, the international police agency had urged China
to clarify Mr Meng's status, saying it was concerned about the well-being of
its president.
France has opened an investigation but said on Sunday it had
no further information.
What did Mr Meng's wife say about his disappearance?
Grace Meng, speaking shortly before China's confirmation of
the detention, told journalists she thought he was in danger.
She issued an emotional plea for international help to find
her husband.
On the day he went missing, she said he had sent her a
social media message telling her to "wait for my call", before
sending a knife emoticon, signifying danger.
"I'm not sure what has happened to him," she said.
With her back to the cameras to avoid being identified out
of fear for her safety, she held back sobs to read out a statement in Chinese
and English.
"We are always connected by hearts. He would support me
in doing this. The matter belongs to fairness and justice. The matter belongs
to the international community. The matter belongs to the people of my
motherland."
The Xi campaign
Analysis by Hugh Schofield, BBC News, Paris
The Chinese authorities have confirmed what everyone already
presumed: that Meng Hongwei was detained when his plane landed in China.
The fact that news of his detention was released by
Beijing's anti-corruption authority suggests Mr Meng has been caught up in the
broad anti-corruption campaign ordered by President Xi Jinping, and which has
already led to the disappearance of many senior figures.
The mystery of what happened to him has now been cleared up
- but the details of the charges weighing against him, and the fate that awaits
him are as opaque as ever.
What does Interpol do?
Interpol co-ordinates searches among its members, issuing
yellow notices for missing persons and a red notice - an international alert -
for a wanted person. However, it does not have the power to send officers into
countries to arrest individuals or issue arrest warrants.
It is Interpol's general secretariat that largely oversees
the day-to-day work of the 192-member organisation, with the role of the
president largely ceremonial.
Who is Meng Hongwei?
He was elected Interpol president in November 2016, the
first Chinese to take up the post, and was scheduled to serve until 2020.
He headed the organisation's Executive Committee, which
provides overall guidance and direction.
Mr Meng has 40 years of experience in criminal justice and
policing in China, notably in the fields of drugs, counter-terrorism and border
control.
After his election human rights groups expressed concern
that the move could help China pursue political dissidents who have fled the
country.
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