Tag: China

  • Scam Victims From China Allegedly Lost $1.6B, Look For Clues In Singapore

    Scam Victims From China Allegedly Lost $1.6B, Look For Clues In Singapore

    Ripples from a scam that has allegedly cost Chinese investors US$1.2 billion (S$1.6 billion) touched Singapore’s shores yesterday.

    A group of angry investors from China showed up at a flat in Sengkang yesterday afternoon to demand their money back from a Singaporean employee of the company that allegedly caused thousands of investors to get their fingers burnt.

    The seven, who had flown in from Beijing on Sunday, knocked repeatedly on the door of a Singaporean’s flat for two hours to no avail.

    He purportedly worked for API Premiere Swiss Trust AG – a finance firm that has reportedly cost almost 30,000 investors from China US$1.2 billion of their savings.

    In the five days here, the investors have engaged lawyer Chung Ting Fai and lodged a police report with the Commercial Affairs Department.

    They left a note written in Chinese on the man’s door. It read: “Return our hard-earned money.”

    Street protests were held in Beijing and Hong Kong earlier this year when investors realised they might have been duped.

    In January, API sent out a message informing investors that its servers had been hacked.

    Investors could not access their accounts and were told that their money was gone.

    Mr Zhao Guangcai, the group’s leader, said in Mandarin: “We went to Switzerland and found out that the company was a shell.”

    The police had sealed doors to its so-called headquarters.

    The group in Singapore said they had invested through another Singaporean, who visited China and held seminars in Beijing.

    Some investors were also invited to all-expenses-paid trips to Switzerland – where they met with traders – and Dubai.

    They saw forex trading rooms, where traders worked and made deals online.

    Most investors had started by investing about US$10,000 and could withdraw their money any time they wanted. They got back their principle sum – with 8 per cent interest – within a week.

    Over time, they began to pump in more money. Mr Zhao and Ms Miao Lihua, 33, who owns a fashion company, put in more than US$1 million each.

    Now, they want their money back.

    The group, due to return to China yesterday, extended their stay after realising that one of the company’s employees was in Singapore.

    So far, they have spent about $10,000 each, flying around the world to look for leads.

    They plan to stick around the Singaporean’s registered address to demand an explanation from the employee.

    Mr Zhao, 58, said: “He is the closest clue we have to getting our money back. We are not giving up so easily.”

    According to Chinese evening daily Lianhe Wanbao, the Singaporean said he was also a victim and that the company owed him $30,000 in wages.

    He blamed the other Singaporean, whose registered flat in Mei Ling Street is empty, for roping him into the business.

    “I have been looking for him since the start of the year, but I can’t find him. I don’t want to talk about this incident any more. I just want the situation to be over,” he said.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Uighur Community: China Again Bans Fasting In Ramadan

    Uighur Community: China Again Bans Fasting In Ramadan

    China has, once again, banned Ramadan in parts of the far western Xinjiang district for Muslim party members, civil servants, students and teachers.

    Muslims throughout the district – which is known to have a minority population of Uighurs – have been told not to fast during the Holy Month.

    The Uighur leader, Dilxat Raxit, sees the move as China’s attempt to control their Islamic faith and warned that the restrictions would force the Uighur people to resist the rule of the Chinese government even more.

    He added: “The faith of the Uighurs has been highly politicised and the increase in controls could cause sharp resistance.”

    In recent years, Chinese authorities have blamed separatist Uighurs for a string of terrorist attacks on civilian crowds and government institutions, but the group has consistently denied involvement.

    Activists have long-accused Beijing of exaggerating the threat as an excuse to impose restrictions.

    Mr Raxit told Radio Free Asia: “They [the Chinese government] are extracting guarantees from parents, promising that their children won’t fast on Ramadan.”

    According to the government’s website, halal restaurants near the Kazakh border are being encouraged by food safety officials to stay open during daylight hours in Ramadan.

    Shops and restaurants owned by Muslins have also been ordered to continue selling cigarettes and alcohol over the course of the month – or be shut down altogether.

    Beijing is continuing to crack-down against ‘religious extremism’ although human rights groups call it ‘religious repression’, adding that authorities want to prevent Muslims from ‘instilling religion’ into public bodies.

    The ruling party says religion and education should be kept separate and students should not be subject to ‘religious influences’, although this rule is rarely enforced for children of Han Chinese, who – if they have a religion – are mostly Buddhist, Daoist or Christian.

     

    Source: www.independent.co.uk

  • New Citizen From PRC Went AWOL To Pursue Medical Studies At Cambridge

    New Citizen From PRC Went AWOL To Pursue Medical Studies At Cambridge

    He went absent without official leave (AWOL) for more than five years to pursue his studies in Britain.

    Wang Yinchu, then a 22-year-old full-time national serviceman, was one month away from completing his national service when he left Singapore on Oct 8, 2008 to pursue his pre-clinical medical studies at the University of Cambridge.

    After he returned on July 2 last year, he pleaded guilty to being AWOL and was sentenced to three weeks’ detention.

    But the chief military prosecutor appealed against this sentence in the military court of appeal on May 29 and urged a stiffer sentence.

    He was then given 18 months’ detention.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Alibaba Helps Seven Gay And Lesbian Couples From PRC Get Married In West Hollywood

    Alibaba Helps Seven Gay And Lesbian Couples From PRC Get Married In West Hollywood

    WEST HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (Reuters) – Seven gay and lesbian couples from China were married in the Southern California gay capital of West Hollywood on Tuesday after winning a contest sponsored by a pair of Chinese Internet companies.

    The seven couples were selected from among more than 2,000 based on videos they submitted detailing their love stories, after Internet users voted for their top 10 favorites on Taobao, Alibaba’s popular e-commerce site.

    West Hollywood Mayor Lindsey Horvath officiated the wedding ceremonies at a city library for six gay and one lesbian couple who managed to get U.S. visas. The contest was also sponsored by Blued, a social media app popular with gays in China.

    “We’re so honored and happy to have them in West Hollywood,” Horvath said. “We’ve long been a community committed to equal rights for all people, and advancing and protecting the rights especially of our LGBT community.”

    While these couples’ marriages are recognized in California, which legalized gay marriage in 2013, their unions will not be legal in China. China decriminalized homosexuality in 1997, but does still not allow gay marriage.

    “We’ve been together for almost eight years, so we want to give each other a promise or a commitment for life,” said Hu Zhidong, 32, who met his partner, Liu Xin, also 32, at a party, where they found out they shared the same birthday.

    same sex marriage gay marriageREUTERS/Lucy NicholsonA gay couple prepares to get married at a group wedding for seven same-sex couples from China, in West Hollywood, California, United States, June 9, 2015.

    To Xu Na, 29, and Xue Meng Yao, 21, the only lesbian couple participating in the ceremony, the opportunity to use this event to come out was also important.

    “We want to find a proper time to tell our parents,” Xu said. “This could be a good chance for them to see a lot of positive exposure.”

    During the ceremony the couples recited their vows in both English and Chinese, often while shedding tears.

    Geng Le, Blued’s founder and chief executive, said that while many online media outlets in China were interested in covering this event, Chinese television stations might hesitate, because homosexuality was still a sensitive topic there.

    (Editing by Dan Whitcomb and Eric Walsh)

    Read the original article on Reuters. Copyright 2015. Follow Reuters on Twitter.

    Source: www.businessinsider.com

  • Kindergarten Teacher Staples Boy’s Ear

    Kindergarten Teacher Staples Boy’s Ear

    Ouch, that’s got to hurt.

    A kindergarten teacher in Fujian province, China, has been suspended after sending her four-year-old student home on Monday (June 8) with a new piercing — a staple in his ear.

    Media reports did not state why the teacher had done so.

    The child’s mother posted images of his swollen ear on Weibo.

    She had found the staple while giving him a bath. That’s when he began crying in pain.

    PHOTO: WEIBO.COM/ KEVINCKCK

    When the parent asked what happened, the boy said his teacher used a stapler to pierce his ears during noon break.

    The teacher, surnamed Lan, taught at Jiangle County Art Kindergarten in Sanming, southeastern China.

    The county education bureau confirmed the incident.

    According to NetEase News, the teacher is now under police investigation for professional misconduct.

    Meanwhile, kindergarten and education bureau representatives have paid home visits to the boy’s family to offer apologies and express their sympathies.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg