
Manager in China fired for kissing subordinate in office, court rules in favour of boss
A senior manager in eastern China, who was dismissed for kissing a female subordinate in the office, took his employer to court and won a case that captivated mainland social media.
The final verdict of the lawsuit was delivered in 2017. However, the Shanghai General Trade Union only shared a summary of the case online on May 22 as part of a labour law education campaign, leaving unexplained the reasons for the lengthy delay.
The executive, identified only as Lin, was a production supervisor at a foreign shipping company in Qingdao, Shandong province.
He was terminated in May 2015 for violating company policies by sexually harassing a female employee and abusing his power for personal gain.
The company's decision stemmed from surveillance footage that showed Lin hugging and kissing a female worker, surnamed Shi, on the office stairs.
Their marital statuses were not disclosed in the verdict.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
41 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
Paralysed Chinese woman falls for ‘doctor' during rehab, he disappears with US$420,000 loan
A paralysed woman in China who fell in love and married a 'doctor' she met during rehabilitation has been left distraught after he disappeared with a loan of more than three million yuan (US$420,000). Advertisement Li Shangxuan, 31, from Hebei province in northern China, shares her life as a single mother with 220,000 followers on a popular short video platform. Li's family was once well-off, with her parents working in business. Paralysed from the waist down in a 2013 car accident, she has used a wheelchair ever since. Li Shangxuan was left paralysed from the waist down after being involved in a car accident in 2013. Photo: During her rehabilitation, Li met a man surnamed Ding on social media who claimed to be a surgeon. Advertisement


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong's stablecoin ambitions offer Beijing a channel to bring yuan into crypto world
China is not a fan of cryptocurrencies. Over the past decade, the Chinese government has built up one of the world's most hostile regulatory frameworks against cryptocurrency-related activities, including trading and mining. Beijing views digital assets like bitcoin as a threat to the country's financial stability and capital account controls, and even a challenge to the nation's currency sovereignty. Advertisement In the face of challenges from bitcoin and other privately-issued digital currencies such as Facebook's Diem, formally known as Libra, China's central bank has started to promote the use of a 'sovereign' digital yuan. But the digital yuan 'experiment' has for years struggled to find relevance as a form of payment in domestic and international transactions. Against this backdrop, Beijing's tolerance of and supportive attitude towards the stablecoin ambitions of Hong Kong is interesting to observe. Last month, the city's lawmakers passed the Stablecoins Bill , which will take effect later this year, paving the way for stablecoins backed by the Hong Kong dollar and other assets in the city. The green light comes at a time when the second administration of US President Donald Trump has adopted a friendly stance towards stablecoins, a type of cryptocurrency that maintains a fixed value by being pegged to a reference asset such as the US dollar. This photo illustration shows Chinese 100 yuan notes and US 100 dollar notes, in Beijing on April 8, 2025. Photo: AFP China is taking notice. While Beijing has yet to make any official comment on stablecoins, there are research papers making the argument that stablecoins, backed by US dollar assets, represent an extension of US dollar hegemony in the blockchain realm. Advertisement The world's top-10 stablecoins in terms of market capitalisation are all backed by US dollar assets, except Pax Gold that is backed by gold. There are also stablecoins backed by euro assets, but the market cap of these is tiny compared to US dollar ones.


South China Morning Post
4 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Trump ‘likely' to speak to Xi this week, White House says, amid renewed trade tensions
US President Donald Trump is 'likely' to speak to China's President Xi Jinping this week, the White House said on Monday, amid renewed trade tensions between the two countries. Advertisement The prospect for such talks, mentioned to reporters by White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt, comes after China hit back at the United States over alleged violations of a temporary bilateral trade agreement reached in mid-May in Geneva. China's Commerce Ministry on Monday released a statement saying Trump's accusation last week that Beijing had violated the agreement is 'groundless' and 'grossly distorts the facts'. The ministry also criticised the Trump administration for introducing 'discriminatory measures' against China , including issuing guidance on export controls of artificial intelligence chips and revoking visas for Chinese students studying in the United States. Such comments were made after Trump lashed out at China on Friday for 'totally' violating the agreement reached in high-level talks in the Swiss city, under which the two countries committed to backing away from their respective triple-digit tariffs and trade restrictions. Advertisement 'I made a FAST DEAL with China in order to save them from what I thought was going to be a very bad of this deal, everything quickly stabilized and China got back to business as usual,' Trump said in a social media post.