The apprehension of two men in New York on April 16, 2023, marked the first known US arrests in connection with Chinese overseas police stations …More Chinese police stations are believed to be operating across the US—though, like in other countries, not all their locations are known.
While foreign intelligence agencies conduct extensive espionage operations in other countries … the scale of China’s international programme and the scope of its responsibilities is notable. Run primarily by ethnic Chinese residents, the main concern of these stations appears to be managing the more than 10.5 million Chinese citizens living overseas, and to a lesser extent the 35 to 60 million people in the Chinese diaspora.
China’s first known use of these stations occurred in 2004 with the establishment of the Community and Police Cooperation Center in Johannesburg, following several attacks on Chinese citizens and businesses ... As in other countries, they help Chinese citizens obtain documents, assist in criminal matters, integrate into the country, as well as offer “security, fire, and ambulance teams.” The Chinese government maintains that they are not police stations but instead function as “service centers.”
Two reports, released in September and December 2022 … indicated that there are now more than 100 overseas Chinese stations active in more than 50 countries. Managed by China’s Ministry of Public Security, the stations are operated by police agencies from three Chinese provinces.
The stations have also brought increased Western attention due to their role in convincing Chinese citizens to return to China to face legal charges… Western officials had already criticised China for abusing Interpol’s Red Notice system to arrest and extradite citizens abroad for political purposes, while Operation Fox Hunt has allowed Chinese officials to bypass Interpol and deal directly with its own citizens… with China’s Ministry of Public Security itself stating that 210,000 citizens returned in 2021…Several dual Chinese/US citizens were prevented from leaving China in 2017 and 2018 in an apparent effort to convince their family members living in the US to return to China…The US does not have an extradition treaty with China, while the few European countries that do have taken steps to reduce China’s ability to enforce it in recent months…
FBI director Christopher Wray stated in September 2022 that he was “looking into the legal parameters” of the stations… More than a dozen other countries have also launched probes against the stations in recent months, and other countries have significantly scaled back their cooperation with them.
The growth in the number of Chinese tourists traveling abroad previously incentivized many governments to facilitate cooperation with Chinese police forces, for example, and Chinese police officers were formerly permitted to assist Chinese tourists visiting Italian cities. But this decision was reversed in December 2022, while Croatia is under similar pressure to restrict Chinese tourist assistance police patrols in its cities.
Operation Fox Hunt reveals that not even the U.S. has been able to protect dual citizens or those seeking asylum on its own soil. Though Chinese officials will likely have to act even more discreetly for some of their overseas operations, US officials have yet to locate where all these stations are. And even if they are found, the Chinese government has traditionally cultivated close ties with overseas Chinese communities and has additional avenues to project influence.
In 2019, Chinese police officers began patrolling several Serbian cities alongside Serbian police forces to assist Chinese tourists. Additionally, Chinese police officers have worked out of an office in Cambodia’s national police headquarters since 2019 to manage Chinese citizens suspected of being involved in crime. Chinese police and security forces have also drastically increased their cooperation with their Latin American counterparts over the last decade to “speed up the signing process of treaties concerning judicial assistance in criminal matters, and expand cooperation in such areas as fighting crimes, fugitive repatriation and asset recovery,” according to the Chinese government.
In February 2023, China also unveiled its Global Security Initiative to enhance training and cooperation with developing countries’ security forces. And because Chinese stations do act as legitimate centers aimed to help Chinese citizens abroad, countries with good relations with China and existing and growing Chinese immigrant and worker communities will likely allow further expansion for Chinese overseas stations.
All of this can be solved if you create extradition treaties with China.