
Police deployed in China to stop teen bullying case protest
Police Swat teams were deployed in southwestern China in early August after a protest erupted over authorities' handling of a school bullying case the previous month. According to footage posted online, the protest happened on August 4 in the Sichuan city of Jiangyou.

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South China Morning Post
8 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
12 arrested for allegedly selling fake G-Dragon, G.E.M. concert tickets in Hong Kong
Hong Kong and Shenzhen police have broken up a cross-border syndicate and arrested 12 people for allegedly scamming victims out of more than HK$100,000 (US$12,740) with fake tickets to local shows featuring performers such as K-pop star G-Dragon and Cantopop singer G.E.M.. The force said on Sunday that joint operations with Shenzhen police had dismantled a syndicate that operated a workshop to produce fake tickets for concerts and sports events in the neighbouring Chinese city. Errand runners in Hong Kong were used to deliver tickets to victims. 'The tickets we intercepted are highly similar to real ones in terms of font, counter-counterfeiting features, and materials,' said Superintendent Wan King-hang of the Kowloon East regional headquarters' crime division. 'Residents might easily fall into such fake ticket traps.' The arrests were made between Tuesday and Saturday for events from June to August, including G-Dragon's three sell-out concerts at AsiaWorld-Arena and coming shows by singer Gloria Tang Tsz-kei, also known as G.E.M., at the Kai Tak Stadium starting this Friday, police said. Across the border, four people, including three Hongkongers and one mainlander, were arrested by Shenzhen police for fabricating value-bearing coupons, an offence punishable by imprisonment of up to seven years upon conviction in mainland China.


South China Morning Post
9 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong police search for prankster after HK$7,000 of ‘free nappies' taken
Hong Kong police are searching for a middle-aged man in connection with false claims on social media that dozens of boxes of nappies temporarily left in a lift lobby had expired and were up for grabs. The 38-year-old owner of a baby product store who left the goods in the lobby filed a police report at 5.40pm on Saturday, after a friend alerted him to the social media post. The prankster allegedly took a photo of the nappies in the fifth-floor lift lobby of Golden Dragon Industrial Centre Block 3 in Kwai Fong and posted it to a Facebook group, saying that they had expired and were 'free for the taking' before Monday. A social media post said the nappies had expired. Photo: Handout Twenty-four boxes, worth around HK$7,000 (US$900), out of 66 had gone as of Saturday. The shop owner subsequently clarified on social media that he had been 'pranked' and appealed for the return of the goods. He said on Saturday night that 90 per cent of the lost boxes had been recovered and he would leave the rest for police to handle, stressing that the nappies had not expired. 'We made a mistake too, we left the stock on the fifth floor because our warehouse was full,' he said. Police have classified the case as theft and are searching for a man in his fifties in connection with the incident, after having looked at CCTV footage.


South China Morning Post
10 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
China mum, 90, self-learns law to defend accused son in US$16 million extortion case
The 90-year-old mother of a defendant in a 117 million yuan (US$16 million) extortion case in China was so devoted to her son that she self-learned the law and appeared in court to defend him. The case was heard at Zhoushan Municipal Intermediate Court in Zhejiang province, eastern China, on July 30, the Huashang News reported. The defendant, a 57-year-old man known as Lin, was arrested in April 2023 for blackmailing a local entrepreneur surnamed Huang out of 117 million yuan, according to prosecutors. Nonagenarian He pours over legal documents so that she can defend her son in court. Photo: Weibo Huang was among the top 100 richest people in China in 2009, with a net worth of eight billion yuan (US$1.1 billion) at that time. Lin and Huang cooperated in the gas production business, but Huang often failed to pay on time, leading to the suspension of production at Lin's factory and severe losses. From 2014 to 2017, Lin and his accountant forced Huang to pay a total of 117 million yuan by threatening to tip the tax authorities off about his irregular practices. At the beginning of 2023, Huang reported Lin to the police for extortion.