logo
Shaolin Temple leader under investigation on suspicion of embezzling funds

Shaolin Temple leader under investigation on suspicion of embezzling funds

The notice said multiple departments are conducting a joint investigation against Shi Yongxin, and relevant findings would be announced to the public in due course.
The fame of the Shaolin Temple, based in the central Chinese province of Henan, has gone beyond a religious institution.
Shi Yongxin, third from right, is alleged to have committed several offences (Chinatopix via AP)
It is also famous for its martial arts culture, or kung fu, which has been referenced in many movies and TV dramas, including the 1982 film The Shaolin Temple, starring martial arts superstar Jet Li.
The news about Shi Yongxin, whose original name Liu Yingcheng, ranked top on Chinese search engine Baidu and X-like social media platform Weibo on Sunday night.
Local media reported that the abbot had been hit by scandalous accusations in the past, including claims that he fathered several children and embezzled money. According to news outlet Caixin Global, provincial investigation reports exonerated him of all charges in 2016.
Shi Yongxin entered Shaolin Temple in 1981 and became its abbot in 1999, according to the temple's website. Xinhua in 2015 reported that he was known as a 'CEO monk,' as one of the first Chinese monks to obtain an MBA, and he had sparked controversy for developing commercial operations like lucrative kung fu shows and merchandise.
Earlier on Sunday, Chinese local media outlets reported that authorities had dismissed an online notice claiming Shi Yongxin was intercepted by authorities while trying to flee with his mistresses and children as fake.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Shaolin Temple's ‘CEO monk' under investigation for embezzlement
Shaolin Temple's ‘CEO monk' under investigation for embezzlement

Times

time5 hours ago

  • Times

Shaolin Temple's ‘CEO monk' under investigation for embezzlement

F or decades, he has been China's most famous monk. Abbot Shi Yongxin ran one of the country's most revered and historic sites, a sort of Glastonbury Abbey and York Minster rolled into one. Shaolin Temple in Zhengzhou is the reputed home of Zen Buddhism and the 'kung fu' martial arts, known as wushu to the Chinese. But under Shi it became a brand, featuring in films, running networks of schools and martial arts performance centres and cultivating an enormous tourist trade. Shi, 59, travelled the world, with an iPhone and an iPad, earning the nickname 'the CEO monk'. According to allegations levelled this week by the Communist Party, Shi embezzled temple funds, engaged in a number of long-term relationships with women and fathered an illegitimate child.

Gunman ‘with grudge' kills five at Bangkok market
Gunman ‘with grudge' kills five at Bangkok market

Glasgow Times

time5 hours ago

  • Glasgow Times

Gunman ‘with grudge' kills five at Bangkok market

The victims included four security guards at the Or Tor Kor market in northern Bangkok, according to a police statement. It said a vendor there was also killed, and that two others were wounded. The market is next to the sprawling Chatuchak weekend market, which is popular with Thai and foreign tourists. A statement by Bangkok's Metropolitan Police Commissioner issued several hours after the shooting said the gunman's wife told them that he had held a grudge against the security guards related to his car being scratched in 2019 or 2020. The wife has a food stall at the market, the statement said. 'Mr Noi is a person who loves and is very protective of his car, and is also a violent person,' said the statement, identifying the suspect only by a nickname. It said the gunman walked away after the shooting and shot himself with a handgun on a bench. He had been wearing a black T-shirt, military-pattern shorts, a baseball cap and a backpack. The statement stressed that the incident involved a personal conflict and was not linked to the border fighting with neighbouring Cambodia, as had been rumoured on social media. A policeman of a special operations unit at a crime scene at a market in Bangkok, Thailand (Nava Sangthong/AP) Gun violence is not unusual in Thailand, which has fairly restrictive laws but also a high level of gun ownership. The last mass shooting in Bangkok was in October 2023 when a teenage boy shot more than half a dozen people at the Paragon shopping centre with a modified blank pistol in the city's main shopping district, killing three people. One of the country's worst mass killings occurred in October 2022 in the north-eastern province of Nong Bua Lamphua, when a police sergeant who had lost his job used guns and knives to kill 36 people, including two dozen toddlers at a day care centre. In February 2020, a disgruntled Thai army soldier shot and killed 29 people, most at a shopping centre in the north-eastern city of Nakhon Ratchasima, before he was killed by police after an 18-hour stand-off.

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