China jails antimony smugglers in critical minerals crackdown

A Chinese court has convicted 27 individuals of smuggling more than 166 tonnes of antimony, a critical mineral used in weapons, semiconductors and flame retardants. The case marks a significant enforcement of Beijing's tighter export controls on dual-use items. Lead defendant Wang Wubin received 12 years in prison and a 1 million yuan fine.

The Shenzhen Intermediate People’s Court in Guangdong province convicted 27 individuals of smuggling more than 166 tonnes of antimony without export licences, in a major enforcement of Beijing's controls on dual-use items. The court issued a statement on Tuesday detailing how the group conspired with an overseas smuggling gang to ship the metal ingots out of China between February and March this year.

Lead defendant Wang Wubin was sentenced to 12 years in prison and fined 1 million yuan (US$142,000), with others facing penalties from four months' detention to five years in prison. “The circumstances were serious and warrant severe punishment in accordance with the law,” the court stated. Wang was found to have organized the group to purchase, conceal and disguise the metal to evade customs.

Critical minerals like antimony have become a key battleground in the technological and security rivalry between major powers. Beijing, which dominates the global supply and production of many such materials, has increasingly tightened its grip on them. This verdict underscores the enforcement of China's export controls.

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China's Ministry of Natural Resources announced on Wednesday that the country holds the world's largest reserves of 14 key minerals and leads global production in 17 others. This highlights China's major role in global resource supply chains. The data was disclosed at a monthly media briefing.

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On Wednesday, United States authorities charged Chinese nationals and companies in two separate cases with offenses including conspiring to smuggle advanced AI chips to China and drug trafficking with money laundering. One case involves smuggling American-made AI chips via Thailand, the other an alleged fentanyl supply chain.

China's Commerce Ministry announced measures against 40 Japanese companies and entities on Tuesday, citing national security concerns over their military ties. It imposed export controls on 20 entities and added another 20 to a watch list for stricter reviews of dual-use items. The actions aim to curb Japan's remilitarization and nuclear ambitions.

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Hong Kong authorities uncovered 23 cross-boundary counterfeiting cases in a joint operation with mainland China and Macau in April, seizing about 46,000 items worth HK$16 million. The operation targeted express couriers and lorries at the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge. Two drivers were arrested and released on bail.

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