Turkey hosts Interpol meeting with China, UAE bidding for top posts

More than 470 officials from over 160 countries are attending a three-day conference in Istanbul where the global body will elect a new president and executive committee members.

Interpol says it refuses to be used for political ends.
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Interpol says it refuses to be used for political ends.

Interpol has kicked off its annual meeting in Turkey's financial capital Istanbul to discuss security threats and crime trends as well as to hold a closely-watched election for the international police body's new leadership.

On Tuesday, about 470 police chiefs, ministers, and other representatives from more than 160 countries attended the three-day General Assembly, which is scheduled to vote on Thursday to elect a new president and executive committee members.

Delegates voted to admit the Federated States of Micronesia, raising the number of Interpol members to 195, according to an Interpol statement.

The election for president is being followed closely since the first-ever Chinese president of the body, Meng Hongwei, vanished midway through his four-year term on a return trip to China in 2018. 

It subsequently emerged that he had been detained, accused of bribery and other alleged crimes. Interpol then announced that Meng had resigned from the presidency.

A vice president, Kim Jong-yan from South Korea, was swiftly elected as a replacement to serve out the rest of Meng's term. 

Kim's presidency was due to end in 2020, but his tenure has been extended by a year after the coronavirus pandemic prompted Interpol to scrap its annual assembly last year. 

His replacement will be elected for one four-year term.

READ MORE: Interpol readmits Syria as a member, exposing dissidents to persecution

UAE, China bid for top posts 

The vote is also the subject of added controversy because representatives from China and the United Arab Emirates are bidding for top posts. 

Critics contend that if these candidates win, their countries would use Interpol's global reach to apprehend exiled dissidents and even political opponents at home, instead of hunting down drug smugglers, human traffickers, war crimes suspects, and alleged extremists.

One of the candidates is accused by human rights groups of involvement in torture and arbitrary detentions in the United Arab Emirates. 

Major General Ahmed Naser al Raisi, inspector general at the UAE's Interior Ministry, is already a member of Interpol's executive committee. He says he wants to modernise Interpol.

Criminal complaints have been filed against him in five countries, including in France, where Interpol has its headquarters, and in Turkey where the election is taking place.

The other controversial candidate is Hu Binchen, an official at China's Ministry of Public Security, expected to be up for a vacant spot on Interpol's executive committee. 

Hu, who is backed by China's government, which is suspected to have used the global police agency to hunt down exiled dissidents and of disappearing its citizens.

Interpol says it refuses to be used for political ends.

READ MORE: Interpol rejects Iran request to assist in Trump arrest warrant

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