• <tr id="yyy80"></tr>
  • <sup id="yyy80"></sup>
  • <tfoot id="yyy80"><noscript id="yyy80"></noscript></tfoot>
  • 99热精品在线国产_美女午夜性视频免费_国产精品国产高清国产av_av欧美777_自拍偷自拍亚洲精品老妇_亚洲熟女精品中文字幕_www日本黄色视频网_国产精品野战在线观看 ?

    Identity Crisis

    2019-07-01 02:37譚云飛
    漢語世界(The World of Chinese) 2019年3期

    譚云飛

    Fraudsters are exploiting bureaucratic inertia over ID fraud.

    For nearly four years, a man wanted for murdering his mother evaded police with a series of false identities. The capture of 24-year-old Wu Xieyu at a Chongqing airport in April, with over 30 national ID cards in his possession, has once more drawn attention to the thriving illegal market in fake identities—and the bureaucracy than enables it.

    According to an April report by CNR, authentic Chinese ID cards, many lost or stolen from their original holders, can easily be bought on social-media channels such as WeChat and Tencent QQ for as little as 500 RMB (35 USD). Millions of lost or stolen ID cards are sold annually, China Youth Daily reported in 2015; police in the city of Tianjin registered over 190,000 such losses in 2014 alone.

    In October 2017, a Zhengzhou resident surnamed Sun received a lawyers letter, warning her of overdue loans in two provinces that someone applied for using an ID card that had been stolen from Sun three years ago. Many others have reported similar stories of their identities being used to borrow money, register companies, or commit crimes. One problem is that older ID cards, issued before 2004, feature a “non-contact” chip and cannot be deregistered even after cardholders report their loss to the police and get a new one.

    One seller told CNR that he could fabricate a new ID for 200 RMB, which would only be detectable by police, rail, and aviation systems, or organizations that have access to the official police database. Phone companies and banks, however, rarely check the holders identity, often enabling criminals to register burner phone numbers and bank accounts under stolen IDs for activities such as fraud, bribery, money laundering, and tax evasion.

    In 2018, after being disqualified from an affordable housing program, a man named Feng Liming from Shijiazhuang, Hebei province, found that two companies had been fraudulently registered under his name, one of which owed 3 million RMB in taxes.

    While police say that only the criminals and relevant government departments should be held accountable for identity theft, according to Article 280 of Chinas Criminal Law, its still extremely difficult for victims of the fraud to exculpate themselves.

    Fengs yearlong effort to prove his innocence had proven fruitless until his case was picked up by CCTV in February 2019: The taxation authority told him he can only deregister the company without paying the taxes if the local market supervision administration confirms that the company was not his. Feng pointed out the obviously faked signatures on the papers, but authorities suggested that he file a lawsuit to prove it.

    However, as lawyer Qi Wenjin told CCTV, Feng could “hardly win” a lawsuit without knowing who stole his identity. Although the authorities eventually caved in to media pressure and allowed Feng to clear his name, ID theft remains a problem that nobody wants to identify with.

    桂平市| 进贤县| 常熟市| 泉州市| 即墨市| 当阳市| 贵南县| 洛南县| 财经| 襄汾县| 密云县| 玉溪市| 濮阳市| 江口县| 青岛市| 南阳市| 壶关县| 临湘市| 德令哈市| 石渠县| 孝昌县| 玉门市| 法库县| 南丰县| 改则县| 舟曲县| 湘潭县| 武冈市| 苏州市| 凤山市| 搜索| 蓝山县| 四子王旗| 和平县| 濮阳县| 兴仁县| 镇远县| 萨迦县| 南华县| 若尔盖县| 罗平县|