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China’s 117-million-yuan phone scam: involvement of Taiwanese suspects may fuel Beijing’s row with Taipei

Police crack China’s biggest phone scam case, arresting 10 Taiwanese

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Chinese police say they have cracked the nation's biggest phone scam case. The involvement of Taiwanese suspects could complicate a row between Beijing and Taipei over jurisdiction in such cases. File Photo
Wendy Wuin Beijing

Mainland police say they have cracked China’s largest phone scam – involving 117 million yuan (HK$140 million) – and that key suspects are Taiwanese, complicating a disagreement between Beijing and Taipei over jurisdiction in such cases.

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The public security bureau of Guizhou province had arrested 62 suspects, 10 of whom were Taiwanese, following a four-month investigation, China Central Television reported yesterday.

A financial executive in an economic development zone in the city of Duyun was contacted in December by people claiming to represent banks and public security bureaus.

They convinced the executive, surnamed Yang, that bank accounts he managed were suspected of involvement in crime and needed to be investigated.

Beijing steps up war of words with Taiwan over freed phone scam suspects deported from Malaysia

Within a week, the fraudsters had transferred 117 million yuan from two accounts managed by Yang, state media reported.

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