
Chinese man offers US$70,000 bounty to find real killer after wrongfully jailed for 8 years
Chen Shijiang, 49, from eastern China's Shandong province, has taken to social media in search of clues.
In 1998, at the age of 22, Chen was wrongly convicted of killing a woman in his village.
The 56-year-old victim was the wife of a cash keeper for the village government. Chen was accused of killing her to steal money for a furniture factory he was planning to open.
Chen Shijiang is offering a reward of US$70,000 for information leading to the capture of the real killer. Photo: handout
Chen said he was tortured by the police to confess to the crime, but the court did not believe him.

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


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Bangladesh protest victim, witness gives evidence in ex-PM Hasina trial
The first witness in the trial of Bangladesh's fugitive ex-prime minister Sheikh Hasina gave evidence on Sunday, a man shot in the face during protests that toppled her last year. Hasina, 77, who has defied court orders to return from India to attend her trial on charges amounting to crimes against humanity, is accused of ordering a deadly crackdown in a failed bid to crush the student-led uprising. Up to 1,400 people were killed between July and August 2024, according to the United Nations. The first witness, among the 11 cases that the prosecution is expected to present to the court, was Khokon Chandra Barman, whose story reflects the violence of the protests. The 23-year-old wears a mask to conceal his face, which was ripped apart by gunshot during the culmination of the protests on August 5, 2024, the same day that Hasina fled Dhaka by helicopter. 'I want justice for the ordeal I've been going through, and for my fellow protesters who sacrificed their lives,' he told the court.


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Drone use signals India and Pakistan need new norms of engagement
On July 21, reports confirmed that militant groups in Pakistan have begun using small quadcopter drones to target security forces. While this may appear to be a mere tactical shift, it reflects a deeper and more alarming transformation in South Asia's strategic arena. The growing convergence of non-state actors, emerging technologies and external enablers is eroding traditional conflict thresholds and obscuring accountability. Advertisement Drawing lessons from the Russia-Ukraine and Iran-Israel conflicts, where low-cost drones were used for strategic disruption, this emerging threat paradigm in South Asia introduces new risks of inadvertent escalation, especially between nuclear-armed rivals . Without clearly defined red lines and mutual restraint regarding the use of proxies and low-cost precision systems against strategic assets, India and Pakistan are headed towards a phase of strategic ambiguity that will undermine crisis stability and complicate deterrence efforts. Before attacking Iran, Israeli operatives reportedly smuggled parts of small armed drones into the country using civilian vehicles. These drones were deployed to inhibit Iran's air defence systems, enabling continued Israeli bombardment . Ukraine's drone operations deep inside Russian territory, which involved 117 drones using Russian cellular networks, reportedly destroyed a third of the Kremlin's strategic bombers on the tarmac of four airfields. This heralds a troubling trend in modern warfare: the use of infiltration paired with the strategic utility of low-cost weapons systems. Pakistan faces a similar trajectory of threats. In April, security officials said they had uncovered a terror plot to attack Masroor Airbase, one of the country's most sensitive military sites. Such an attack would not be unprecedented. Witnesses to a 2011 attack on Mehran Naval Base said militants destroyed P-3C Orion aircraft essential for anti-submarine warfare and maritime surveillance. The 2012 attack on Minhas Airbase in Karma resulted in damage to early warning defences. Such attacks, previously conducted through militant infiltration, now risk being supplemented or replaced by drone-based incursions launched from within Pakistan's territory or border regions. The complexity is further deepened by India's evolving approach to covert operations. Advertisement Since 2021, Indian intelligence services have reportedly orchestrated a campaign of targeted assassinations inside Pakistan using Pakistani and Afghan nationals rather than Indian operatives. These operations, conducted with the help of intermediaries in the United Arab Emirates, indicate efforts to establish deniable operation channels. Similar tactics have reportedly been applied in Canada.


South China Morning Post
4 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
‘Bandits' kidnap more than 50 in Nigeria amid sectarian, gang violence
Gunmen kidnapped more than 50 people in northwest Nigeria in a mass abduction, according to a private conflict monitoring report created for the United Nations and seen by journalists on Sunday. Advertisement 'Armed bandits' targeted the village of Sabon Garin Damri in Zamfara state on Friday, the report said, the latest attack in a region where residents in rural hinterlands have long suffered from gangs who kidnap for ransom, loot villages and demand taxes. The report said this was the first 'mass capture' incident in the Bakura local government area this year, 'the recent trend of mass captures in Zamfara has been concerning,' noting 'a shift in bandit strategy toward more large-scale attacks in northern Zamfara.' A Zamfara police spokesman did not respond to a request for comment. Nigeria's 'banditry' crisis originated in conflict over land and water rights between herders and farmers but has morphed into organised crime, with gangs preying on rural communities that have long had little or no government presence. Advertisement The conflict is worsening a malnutrition crisis in the northwest as attacks drive people away from their farms, in a situation that has been complicated by climate change and Western aid cuts