BEIJING, May 7 (Xinhua) -- Procurators across China
have brought 62 government officials to court for allegedly protecting criminal
gangs in their precincts, according to China's Supreme People's Procuratorate
(SPP).
"Procurators at all levels have detained more than
17,600 criminal gang suspects from March 2006 to March 2007, and brought more
than 10,000 of them to court," said a SPP source
Zhou Yongkang, minister of public security, last
month ordered a continued national crackdown on criminal gangs, noting that two
big events -- the 17th National Congress of the Communist Party of China and the
Beijing Olympic Games -- are around the corner.
Police say they have broken up more than 3,000 gangs
in the past 14 months, 54 of which involve "protecting umbrellas" from
government officials.
The SPP source said local procurators have set up
special working groups to crack down on criminal gangs and to dig out any
official sponsors involved.
In one of the most prominent cases, Xu Xiaogang,
former vice director of the provincial public security department of east
China's Jiangxi province, was sentenced earlier this month to life imprisonment
for graft and illegal possession of guns.
Xu received bribes -- including cash bribes of
850,000 yuan (109,000 U.S. dollars) and 10,000 U.S. dollars and two jade
bracelets worth 82,000 yuan (10,500 U.S. dollars) -- from a local gang that
operated a series of business scams, ran underground casinos and possessed a big
stock of guns.
Xiong Xinxing, the head of the gang, was sentenced to
death and executed on Jan. 11 this year.
Related:
China's police chief declares war on
crime gangs
BEIJING, April 26 (Xinhua) -- The head of China's police
authority on Thursday ordered a continued crackdown on crime gangs, as the
police reported that it had broken up more than 3,000 gangs in the past 14
months.
"We should continue the fight and declare war on
crime gangs to curb their rampant growth," said Zhou Yongkang, minister of
public security, at a national televised conference.