Welcome to Sentosa. Roslan Rahman/AFP/Getty Images.

Sentosa, a resort island of palm trees and imported sand off the southern coast of Singapore, is a place devoted to pleasure. It has theme parks, golf courses, elegant gardens and casinos. You get the sense that the rules of this famously law-abiding republic might not apply here: a land of the super-rich where villas rent for $35,000 a month.
That sense would turn out to be illusory. In mid-August, Singapore police arrested a couple here in their mid-forties as part of a country-wide raid targeting suspected money-laundering. The man had a passport from Saint Kitts and Nevis, The Straits Times reported, while his partner had a Dominican passport — but both were also Chinese nationals.
Overall, 10 people were arrested across Singapore that day and charged with offences relating to money-laundering. The group held passports from countries including Cyprus, Turkey, and Vanuatu, but all originated from China. Police seized assets including wine, jewellery, Bentley and Rolls-Royce cars and Patek Philippe watches, collectively valued at S$1 billion (nearly £600 million).
The raids and the trials that are expected to follow have shone a light on the exodus of money — both licit and illicit — from Xi Jinping’s China. And it draws attention to Singapore’s role as a haven for China’s business elite, both legitimate businesspeople fleeing an increasingly restrictive regime, as well as the small fraction suspected of financial crime. In 2022, China surpassed Russia as the world’s leading exporter of wealthy citizens, according to Henley & Partners, a firm that advises people on how to get residency and citizenship through investment.
Many business elites have decided that the good life is no longer possible in China as long as Xi continues to torment the private sector. Ever since the disappearance of Alibaba founder Jack Ma in 2020, Xi has been cracking down on the leaders of private businesses. Regulators cancelled the stock exchange listing of Ma’s Ant Group, the giant financial tech business behind the Alipay app, which would have been the biggest stock listing in history. And since then, a number of other sectors have had their collars felt, from online gaming to private tutoring, each move apparently aimed at shoring up the Chinese Communist Party’s vision of a healthy society and curbing the excesses of capitalism.
This February, the banker Bao Fan, a legendary tech dealmaker, went missing. His company China Renaissance said he was “cooperating” in an investigation, the details of which have never been specified though his disappearance has dragged on for months. According to the FT, he was in the process of establishing a family office in Singapore to manage his personal wealth. Such vanishing acts undoubtedly unnerve the super-rich, spurring many of them to flee the country.
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