Chinese couple arrested for trying to establish Hong Kong-style region in US-defended Marshall Islands
- US prosecutors said Cary Yan and Gina Zhou offered bribes to Marshall Islands officials in an attempt to set up their own semi-autonomous region
- The Pacific islands are pro-Taiwan and a former territory of the US, with Washington saying it maintains ‘full authority and responsibility’ for their defence
According to a DOJ press release on Friday, Cary Yan, 50, and Gina Zhou, 34, are accused of money laundering and violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
The indictment of Yan and Zhou outlines allegations from prosecutors of how the pair had posed as officers linked to a non-governmental organisation in New York City and tried to bribe Marshall Islands officials while in US territory. According to the filing, the NGO also held a “special consultative status” with the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs from around 2016 to 2018.
The Marshall Islands are a former US territory that gained independence in 1986 and is known for the Bikini Atoll, a coral reef where the US tested nuclear weapons following World War II. The US still maintains “full authority and responsibility” for the Marshall Islands’ defence, according to the State Department.
Prosecutors said Yan and Zhou floated this idea of the “Rongelap Special Economic Zone”, while offering cash bribes to try to influence Marshall Islands legislators to create the zone.
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DOJ lawyer Damian Williams said Yan and Zhou’s bribery scheme was “designed to influence and manipulate the legislative process” in the Marshall Islands to reap financial benefit for themselves and their associates while violating “the integrity of democratic processes”.
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Meanwhile, FBI assistant director Michael J. Driscoll said in the press release that Yan and Zhou had “conducted multiple illegal activities to benefit their personal interests at the expense of the people of the Marshall Islands”.
The DOJ said in a separate statement that they each face a maximum of 20 years in prison for every count of money laundering, and up to five years in prison for violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.