logo
'Eternal Sunshine': Heart-broken man goes to mountain, walks six days to forget girlfriend, now the world knows his viral story

'Eternal Sunshine': Heart-broken man goes to mountain, walks six days to forget girlfriend, now the world knows his viral story

Time of India5 days ago
A massive search was launched in Hangzhou, China, for Xiaolin. He disappeared into mountainous terrain after a breakup. Over 100 police officers and drones were involved. Xiaolin was found after nearly a week. He survived by drinking from springs and eating found food. He is now safe and stable. The incident sparked viral reactions on Chinese social media.
Tired of too many ads?
Remove Ads
Search launched after family raises alarm
Found after nearly a week in the wilderness
Tired of too many ads?
Remove Ads
Viral reaction on Chinese social media
More than 100 police officers, drones, and search equipment were deployed in Hangzhou, southeastern China, to locate a young man who went missing for six days in mountainous terrain after a breakup, according to a report by the South China Morning Post. The man, identified as Xiaolin, had left his home without his phone, food, or water in what police described as an emotional response to a failed relationship Police in Yuhang District were alerted on June 22 by Xiaolin's brother in Changsha, Hunan province , after he had been unreachable for three days. The last contact was on June 19. A visit to Xiaolin's apartment revealed it was empty, with his phone left behind.Surveillance footage showed Xiaolin leaving on foot on the afternoon of June 20. His last known location was in the Dalang Mountain area around 1 a.m. the next day.Despite the use of police dogs, drones, and sonar technology, the search produced no immediate results. On the morning of June 26, Xiaolin was spotted on surveillance footage in a park in Lin'an District. He was found shortly after, in worn and tattered clothing but otherwise safe.Zhu Liliang, deputy director of the Yuhang Police Station, said Xiaolin had walked more than 40 kilometres through mountainous terrain. 'He did not eat or drink for the first three days. Later, when his body could not take it any more, he drank from mountain springs and ate food found near village homes,' Zhu said.Police stated that Xiaolin had been emotionally distressed following a breakup and entered the mountains to clear his mind. He is now in stable condition and has acknowledged the worry caused to his family, promising not to act impulsively again.The incident quickly gained traction on Chinese social media platforms such as Weibo and Douyin. Public reactions ranged from astonishment to criticism.'I am honestly so impressed that he managed to leave his phone behind,' one user wrote. Another commented, 'That girl is lucky she broke up with him. Someone this extreme is not relationship material.'A third post remarked, 'He might be Hangzhou's most devoted lover, but now, instead of forgetting the previous relationship, millions of netizens will remember it for him.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Silent killer on the loose: The menace of Chinese manjha
Silent killer on the loose: The menace of Chinese manjha

Indian Express

time2 hours ago

  • Indian Express

Silent killer on the loose: The menace of Chinese manjha

It's a humid July afternoon. In Southeast Delhi's Sangam Vihar, a 14-year-old has just come back from school. The scrawny teenager quickly changes into brown shorts and a black T-shirt and heads out again. He has to buy a packet of toned milk from a grocery store in the Sangam Vihar market, a small cluster of shops across the road from the main Wazirabad market. But the milk is only part of the errand. The boy, his friends claim, is the contact in the area to get the infamous 'Chinese manjha (kite string)'. 'Kam se kam 200 ka loge? (Will you buy at least Rs 200 worth of manjha?)' — he's often heard asking prospective customers. Once assured the buyer is serious, the boy gestures for them to follow him inside the market. En route is a shabby one-room kite shop, with children queuing up outside. But he passes by without a glance. 'Yahan kuch nai milega. Abhi (police) raid ka season hai. (You won't find anything here. This is the season of raids),' he says, referring to a recent raid by the Delhi Police Crime Branch in Wazirabad on July 5. After passing through a narrow alley, the boy reaches a small medical shop. He steps up and murmurs into the ear of an 18-year-old youth sitting at the counter. 'Rs 220 ek reel manjhe ke liye. Ek dum dhaardaar hai, Bareilly se laya hai mere chacha ka ladka. Bolo toh mangwaunga (Rs 220 for one reel of manja. It's very sharp. My cousin got it from Bareilly. Say the word and I will bring it),' the boy at the counter says. Despite being banned in Delhi, the sale of Chinese manjha continues. The string, made of nylon, is coated with crushed pieces of glass, giving it razor-sharp edges that easily cut through other kite strings in the air — but it is capable of doing far worse on the ground. In recent years, it has been linked to multiple deaths and injuries, particularly among two-wheeler riders whose necks get caught in stray strings hanging across roads. This year, it has already led to the death of one person and injured another. On June 27, Yash Goswami (22) died after his throat was slit by a Chinese manjha on Rani Jhansi flyover in North Delhi. The Karawal Nagar resident was on his way home at the time. 'Goswami suffered a deep cut on his neck, causing him to collapse on the spot. He was rushed to the hospital by passersby, where he was declared dead on arrival,' a police officer had said. In another incident on July 2, the string did not take the life of Axis Bank employee Prakash but slashed his face while he was passing by the Shastri Park flyover on his bike, police had said. Chinese manjha, according to the police and shopkeepers, is primarily produced in Bareilly, Uttar Pradesh. It is called 'Chinese' not because of its origin, but because it is synthetic, unlike traditional Indian Manjha or 'Sadda', which are made from natural cotton threads. In January 2017, the Delhi government moved a notification banning manjha made of nylon and plastic and ones made of cotton coated with glass or metal (popularly known as 'Bareilly ka manjha'). In 2017, the National Green Tribunal had ordered a total ban on manjha made of nylon or any synthetic material. Like every year, the Delhi Police has started its crackdown on the supply of Chinese manjha. With the kite-flying season approaching ahead of Independence Day, the Crime Branch has already seized over 1,200 rolls of the banned thread from three locations in the city. The first seizure was done at Central Delhi's Kamla Market on June 26. Running the illegal manjha operation here was Areeb Khan (22) a former textile store worker. 'He had 248 rolls of banned string and was caught near Kamla Market. Areeb used to work at a clothing store but moved to kite-string selling for more profit,' DCP (Crime) Sanjeev Kumar Yadav had said. The second operation happened in West Delhi's Uttam Nagar on June 27. 2. Raju Chaurasia (51) was arrested in the case. The third operation took place in Sangam Vihar, Wazirabad on July 5. The raid led to the arrest of Danish Khan (28) and the recovery of 56 rolls of manjha. He used to make kites but started selling manjha to earn more money, police had said. In all, 1,226 rolls of Chinese manjha have been found, and police registered three FIRs against the people involved. On Friday itself, brothers Samir (22) and Shakir (18) were arrested from a jhuggi cluster at Nand Nagri with 325 reels of the banned Chinese manjha. They allegedly told the police that they were stocking up for the Independence Day. Kamla Market in Daryaganj, in the Lal Kuan area, is known as the hub for kite shops. Sitting at his family's kite shop is a 13-year-old bespectacled boy, handling customers as the adults have stepped out. Behind him, kites of all shapes and colours are pinned to the wall. The news of Areeb's arrest has spread like wildfire, with shopkeepers now vehemently denying ever possessing the Chinese Manjha. 'Chinese manjha ab nahi milta yaha. Jo bechte the unko bhi pakad liya police ne (Chinese manjha is not available here, the police have caught those who sold them),' says the boy. 'Par uski takkar ka mil jaayega (But you can get something of the same quality at the main shop),' he adds. He goes down a damp lane and, after about 250 m, enters a house with a green curtain serving as its entrance. Inside is a room with high-ceiling, with kites all around. Sitting on the floor, on a ragged, torn maroon carpet, are two teenage boys and an elderly man clad in a white kurta pyjama — all sewing kites. The man owns the kite shop. The 13-year-old asks the man, who is holding a purple kite in his hand, for manjha. The man shouts, 'Indian reel le aa ek (Bring a reel of cotton manjha).' Hearing him, the other two boys, a couple of years older than their bespectacled peer, rush together inside a storeroom. They come out with a reel of thread. 'Cotton hai, par masala chadha hua hai. Wahi glass wala jo hota hai. (It's a cotton thread, but it's coated with glass),' says the man on being asked if the thread has the same sharpness as the 'Chinese one'. According to police officers, the ban applies both to the nylon thread and its deadly glass coating (Bareilly manjha). 'The nylon threads are sometimes replaced by cotton ones at these shops. But they have options. You can buy a sadda (plain cotton reel) or the glass-coated one (glass-coated cotton reel),' an officer said. 'Hard to make arrests' Though suppliers are often caught in raids, arrests are rare in cases where deaths occur from stray manjha hanging in public spaces. 'It's very difficult to nab someone in these cases. The thread gets cut once it tangles around someone on a road or in any public place. It's difficult to trace the owner of one piece of thread found on a random flyover,' a police officer says. No arrests have been made in the two cases from this year, police say. On August 19 in 2023, Sandeep (40) was taking his seven-year-old daughter on an early morning drive on his black motorcycle to Bhaira Enclave in West Delhi's Paschim Vihar. His daughter was sitting in front. He was about to take a turn when his daughter screamed. 'I quickly stopped and got her down — and saw the manjha wrapped around her neck. She was bleeding,' Sandeep had told police at that time. The girl died on her way to the hospital. No one has been arrested till now, a senior police officer says. In August 2019, Manav Sharma (28) had his throat slit by the manjha in Paschim Vihar of Outer Delhi. He was on the way home on a scooter with his sisters after celebrating Raksha Bandhan. No arrest was made in this case either, the officer adds. Monika (26), the younger sister of Manav, was sitting behind him on the scooter, when his throat was slit. 'The scooter has been parked for the last six years in front of our building. No one in our family touched it,' Monika says. The death of Manav, who was the sole breadwinner for a family of five – including his parents and his two sisters – devastated the family. 'We were returning after celebrating Raksha Bandhan. My cousins had come from Punjab. Manav was riding the scooter, and I and my sister were riding pillion. He suddenly stopped and we saw blood gushing from his throat,' Monika says. Monika is now the sole breadwinner of the family of three – her father had died in 2023. 'I work for a private firm… Since he (Manav) left us, I haven't been able to ride a two-wheeler. Every year, I hear about manjhas causing deaths. I don't know about the ban, but how come such a thing that can kill people this easily is still available in the market,' she asks. As Independence Day nears, raids on manjha godowns are expected to be stepped up, senior police officers said. 'Most suppliers get stock 48 hours before August 14, when the demand is at peak. They look to quickly sell and finish off the stock before they can be caught,' an officer added.

Youth arrested for extortion
Youth arrested for extortion

Time of India

time5 hours ago

  • Time of India

Youth arrested for extortion

Nagpur: In a swift crackdown on extortion, Jaripatka police arrested a 25-year-old man for allegedly threatening and demanding protection money from a street food vendor operating a Chinese food stall in Misal Layout. The accused, identified as Punesh Gulabsingh Thackeray, a resident of Misal Layout, had reportedly been harassing the complainant for the past three months. The victim, Saurabh Surendra Ilamkar, 23, a resident of Indora Nagar, runs a roadside Chinese food stall under the name 'Saurabh Chinese'. According to the police, Thackeray first approached Ilamkar three months ago and made threats to stop the latter from running his stall unless he paid Rs 500 every week. "Whom did you ask before starting this stall? Don't you know who I am? I am feared in Jaripatka," Thackeray allegedly warned the vendor. Fearing for his safety and livelihood, the vendor quietly complied for weeks. However, matters escalated on the morning of July 18, when Thackeray arrived at the stall around 10am, while Ilamkar was attending to customers. The accused demanded an increased sum of Rs 2,000 per week. When the vendor refused, citing lack of money, Thackeray reportedly pulled out a knife and began vandalising the stall's equipment. He allegedly issued further threats before fleeing the spot. Following the incident, Ilamkar approached Jaripatka Police Station and lodged a complaint. Acting swiftly, the police registered a case under relevant sections of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) and the Maharashtra Police Act. The accused was booked under the Arms Act and Maharashtra Police Act for possession and use of a dangerous weapon. Jaripatka police launched an immediate manhunt. Within hours, Thackeray was tracked down and placed under arrest. The weapon used in the incident was also seized. Police said Thackeray has a history of criminal activities in Jaripatka and is known to frequently extort money from small business operators and hawkers in the locality.

Your smart TV might be secretly working for criminals, and Google discovered 10 million hacked devices
Your smart TV might be secretly working for criminals, and Google discovered 10 million hacked devices

Time of India

time6 hours ago

  • Time of India

Your smart TV might be secretly working for criminals, and Google discovered 10 million hacked devices

Google filed a federal lawsuit against 25 Chinese entities operating the BadBox 2.0 botnet , which has infected over 10 million Android devices worldwide through pre-installed malware and fraudulent applications . The tech giant's legal action in New York federal court seeks to dismantle what researchers call "the largest known botnet of internet-connected TVs" ever discovered. The malicious network primarily targets uncertified Android devices including streaming boxes, tablets, digital projectors, and car infotainment systems manufactured in China. "The BADBOX 2.0 botnet compromised over 10 million uncertified devices running Android's open-source software, which lacks Google's security protections," Google stated in its complaint filed July 11. "Cybercriminals infected these devices with pre-installed malware and exploited them to conduct large-scale ad fraud and other digital crimes." Criminal enterprise operates through complex network structure Court documents reveal the BadBox operation functions through four distinct criminal groups: the Infrastructure Group managing command-and-control servers, the Backdoor Malware Group developing pre-installed malware, the Evil Twin Group creating fraudulent app versions, and the Ad Games Group generating fake advertising revenue. The botnet generates profits through multiple fraud schemes, including hidden ad loading, click fraud, and creating fake publisher accounts on Google's Ad Network. Infected devices unknowingly view advertisements, generating revenue for the criminal enterprise while exploiting Google's payment system. "The sole purpose of the Enterprise's apps and websites is to provide ad space for BADBOX 2.0 bots to generate traffic," Google explained in its complaint, detailing how the operation monetizes compromised devices. Court grants preliminary injunction against global operations The federal court has issued a preliminary injunction mandating immediate cessation of botnet operations worldwide. The ruling compels internet service providers and domain registries to actively assist in dismantling the criminal infrastructure by blocking traffic to specified domains. Google has already updated its Play Protect security system to automatically block BadBox-related applications. The FBI issued warnings about the botnet last month, highlighting its spread through supply chain compromises and malicious app downloads. Stu Solomon, CEO of HUMAN Security , which assisted in the investigation, praised Google's action: "This takedown marks a significant step forward in the ongoing battle to secure the internet from sophisticated fraud operations that hijack devices, steal money, and exploit consumers without their knowledge." AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store