Supreme People's Procuratorate: Severely crack down on cross-border telecom fraud; approved the arrest and concentrated repatriation of 48,000 fraud-related personnel from northern Myanmar.

robot
Abstract generation in progress

The Supreme People’s Procuratorate released the White Paper on the work of the “Four Major Procuratorial” areas—criminal, civil, administrative, and public interest litigation—for 2025 today. The white paper shows that the number of arrests and prosecutions by procuratorial agencies in 2025 decreased year-on-year, indicating continued improvements in crime control and social security. It states that in 2025, nationwide procuratorial agencies approved and decided to arrest 664,000 suspects of various crimes, and filed 1.404 million public prosecutions, representing decreases of 11.7% and 13.9% respectively, with significant declines and a reduction in overall criminal activity. Serious violent crimes continued to decline, with prosecutions for intentional homicide, robbery, kidnapping, and other serious violent crimes dropping from nearly 190,000 twenty years ago to 54,000 last year, reaching the lowest point in this century. Common and frequent crimes also saw a comprehensive decline; last year, cases of review, prosecution, and prosecution of dangerous driving crimes decreased by 21.5% and 16…5% respectively. Meanwhile, the number of traffic accident deaths involving drunk driving nationwide decreased by 13.8% year-on-year, reflecting ongoing success in drunk driving control. Crimes related to assisting in criminal activities declined by 61.7%, and crimes such as smuggling, drug trafficking, transportation, manufacturing, concealment, and illegal gambling all decreased by over 20% year-on-year. Additionally, the number of crimes involving minors and crimes against minors both declined for the first time in five years, showing a “double decline.” Tong Jianming, the Executive Vice Prosecutor of the Supreme People’s Procuratorate, stated that these downward trends directly reflect the effectiveness of crime control and the improvement of social security. (CCTV News)

View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments
  • Pin