
BEIJING, June 26 (Xinhua) -- China is eyeing closer cooperation with other countries to help counter cross-border corruption, as it prioritizes repatriating corrupt officials who have fled abroad.
During the Seventh China-U.S. Strategic and Economic Dialogue that concluded this week in Washington, the two sides agreed to enhance communication on anti-corruption work.
The two sides reaffirmed their G20 commitments on tackling foreign bribery, denial of safe haven and asset recovery. China is also considering joining the anti-corruption panel of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
As the country's war on graft expands to foreign battlefields, the Communist Party of China (CPC) has listed strengthening international cooperation, pursuing fugitives and recovering stolen assets as one of the seven major aspects of its anti-corruption campaign.
The inter-departmental "Sky Net" operation aimed at pursuing fugitives with economic offenses was launched in April. The police, procuratorates, diplomats and financial sectors are working together to haul in these rogues.
Cai Xia, a professor with the Party School of the CPC Central Committee, said international anti-corruption cooperation does not stop at capturing fugitives. Instead, China is focusing on "building a long-term mechanism for better judicial assistance with other countries."
The international community recognizes that corruption is a global issue, which cannot be addressed through one country's efforts.
![]() |
4-year-old cute 'monk' spends summer holiday in temple
College graduates shining on the red carpet in Nanjing
PLA soldiers launch guided missiles in confrontation exercise
One woman’s fight against dog eaters
Beautiful and smart - post-90s college teacher goes viral
Top 10 luxury houses in the world
National Geographic: best photos during journey
Couples who engage in meaningful and deep conversations are happier
Maldives resort rated best hotel of 2015
Global attitude poll reinforces old thinking
Luxembourg scholar explodes myths about Tibet independence
Smuggled meat came via Vietnam: official
Mentally ill confined at home due to lack of resources and public educationDay|Week