Chinese courts blacklist nearly 9.6 mln defaulters

BEIJING -- More than 9.59 million people had been placed on a credit blacklist for defaulting by the end of 2017, according to the Supreme People's Court (SPC).
Defaulters have been restrained from purchasing more than 9.36 million plane tickets and 3.67 million high-speed train tickets by the end of 2017, the SPC said.
The SPC has cooperated with airlines and railway companies to bar those who default from purchasing tickets, based on ID card information and their passports.
Moreover, the SPC has worked with banks to reject loan and credit card applications from people who have defaulted.
Courts nationwide had frozen deposits totaling more than 180 billion yuan ($27.7 billion) owned by defaulters, the SPC said.
People on the blacklist are also restricted from serving as corporate representatives or executives.
- Shanghai university launches AI platform for global scientific collaboration
- Rainstorm forces evacuation of over 3,000 residents in suburban Beijing
- Two dead, two missing after torrential rainfall in Hebei
- Recall vote shows DPP's manipulation runs against Taiwan people's will: mainland spokesperson
- Expert: 'Taiwan independence' has no future
- Closed-door seminar highlights China's push for autonomous delivery