China has set up G20 research centre on anti-corruption, fugitive repatriation and asset recovery in Beijing as part of an effort to boost international anti-corruption cooperation.
The move aims to implement and promote deals reached at the G20 summit held earlier this month in China's eastern city of Hangzhou, where the grouping's leaders unanimously endorsed China's initiative to establish such a centre in the country.
The centre was set up yesterday and is seated at Beijing Normal University. It will be the first of its kind for G20 members to carry out research, state-run Xinhua news agency reported.
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Speaking to the media after the summit in Hangzhou, Chinese President Xi Jinping, who launched a massive anti-corruption drive netting thousands of officials, said important breakthroughs had been made this year in anti-graft area in terms of fugitive repatriation and asset recovery.
"This will leave corrupt officials no place to hide in G20 members' territories and in the world at large," he had said.
The joint statement issued at the end of the summit in which Prime Minister Narendra Modi took part said "we commit to continue the G20 Denial of Entry Experts Network."
"Consistent with our national legal systems, we will work on cross-border cooperation and information sharing between law enforcement and anti-corruption agencies and judicial authorities," it had said.
"We call for ratification by all the G20 members of the UN Convention Against Corruption and welcome the launch of the second cycle of its review mechanism. We will endeavour to apply effectively the extradition, mutual legal assistance and asset recovery provisions of the above Convention and other applicable international conventions," it said.
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