The State Administration for Industry and Commerce (SAIC) of
China has launched a one-year-long nationwide crackdown on pyramid
selling in collaboration with the Ministry of Public Security.
The crackdown will mainly focus on Guangxi, Guangdong, Shandong,
Henan and 10 others regions where pyramid selling is particularly
rampant, a SAIC spokesperson said here Wednesday.
The campaign will particularly target organizations engaged in
cross-regional pyramid selling, the recruitment of students into
such activities, and organizations that misrepresent reality to
recruit their members, accommodate them in dormitories and force
them to engage in pyramid selling, the spokesperson said.
Pyramid selling was outlawed in China in 1988. Years of
crackdown, however, have failed to completely weed out the
evil.
Having set up better organizations that are harder to penetrate,
pyramid sellers are well disguised and highly intelligent. Many of
them conduct business on the Internet and others disguise their
illegal activities as chain stores, the spokesperson said.
In some cases, a pyramid selling organization may have thousands
or even tens of thousands of members, with a turnover of more than
1 billion yuan, said the spokesperson.
In the first eight months of the year, Chinese authorities
investigated 2,441 pyramid selling cases, taking as many as 420,000
people out of the illegal workforce.
A total of 1,325 persons were prosecuted or convicted in 199
cases, the spokesperson said.
(Xinhua News Agency September 21, 2006)