China doubled down on its anti-corruption leadership this week as Vice Foreign Minister Hua Chunying addressed world leaders at the UN Convention Against Corruption in Doha. With 192 countries present, the conference comes as global financial crime reaches record levels in 2025. 💼🌍
『The Great Cleanup』: China's Homegrown Success
Hua spotlighted China's decade-long anti-graft campaign, crediting the Communist Party's Eight-Point Regulation for 'keeping officials in check through institutional discipline.' The policy has become a blueprint for other nations – and a talking point ahead of China's 2026 APEC hosting duties. 📈
Global Hunt: Stolen Cash & Fugitives
'Corruption isn't a local crime anymore – it's borderless,' Hua declared, urging faster asset recovery processes and cross-border legal cooperation. The push aligns with China's Global Governance Initiative, which gained traction this year among developing economies. 🔍🌐
APEC 2026: Next Anti-Graft Stage
All eyes now turn to China's 2026 APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting, where anti-corruption talks will take center stage. Analysts predict new digital tracking systems and crypto regulations could dominate the agenda. 💻🔗
The Doha conference continues through Friday, with working groups focused on preventive policies and international enforcement networks.
Reference(s):
China reaffirms global anti-graft cooperation at UN conference
cgtn.com







