The Ministry of Public Security (MPS) plans to set up a database
of people involved in pyramid selling schemes, in an effort to step
up the crackdown on these illegal activities.
The MPS and local police departments at all levels will work
together to collect data and information about organizers and core
members, said Zheng Shaodong, a senior police officer in charge of
financial crimes, at Wednesday's national conference on the issue
held in Jinan, the capital of east China's Shandong Province.
The State Administration of Industry and Commerce (SAIC) will
also set up a database on these criminals, and monitor and severely
punish people involved in illegal sales, according to SAIC Deputy
Director Zhong Youping.
The MPS official said pyramid sellers had had a very negative
impact on social stability. He said that some organizers had
achieved psychological mastery over members, violating the law and
basic ethics by repeatedly brainwashing them with distorted
facts.
Pyramid selling groups are well organized and some operate under
the disguise of corporations or chain stores. Many of them do
business on the Internet or use other high-tech commercial
methods.
MPS and SAIC have already launched a yearlong campaign on
pyramid selling across China, mainly targeting organizations
engaged in recruiting students into the illegal business.
In the first eight months of the year, Chinese authorities
investigated 2,441 pyramid selling cases, cutting off sources of
illegal work for as many as 420,000 people.
Compared to 2005, illegal sales activities are now better
controlled in most parts of the country. This year, the campaign
will focus on Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, and Guangdong, Shandong and Henan provinces and 10 other regions, where
pyramid selling has been particularly rampant, according to the MPS
official.
In 1998, the authorities banned pyramid selling schemes, or
multi-level marketing, but allowed direct-sales activities to
continue in the country. Since then, companies involved in direct
selling have been ordered to open shops.
(Xinhua News Agency September 22, 2006)