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chinese police’s reminders!these food prohibited to enter china!

just now, the official weibo account of people’s daily released a short video, saying that bringing this kind of product to china belongs to drug trafficking!

© video | people’s daily

chinese police's reminders!these food prohibited to enter china!

canada is only the second country in the world-and the first g7 nation-to implement legislation to permit a nationwide marijuana market. in the neighboring us, nine states and the district of columbia now allow for recreational marijuana use, and 30 allow for medical use.

chinese police's reminders!these food prohibited to enter china!

© image | google

on twitter, trudeau praised this move and said “it’s been too easy for our kids to get marijuana – and for criminals to reap the profits. today, we change that. our plan to legalize & regulate marijuana just passed the senate.” 

chinese police's reminders!these food prohibited to enter china!

chinese police's reminders!these food prohibited to enter china!

© image | twitter

actually, uruguay was the first country to legalize marijuana’s production, sale, and consumption in december 2013.

 

chinese police's reminders!these food prohibited to enter china!

therefore, many products in these areas that legalize marijuana mainly contain marijuana element. once you use this kind of product, you’ll get addicted, which is the same as taking drugs. 

 

certainly, when you are shopping in the market, you must check its burden sheet carefully. the abbreviation of marijuana is thc!!!

 

chinese police's reminders!these food prohibited to enter china!

chinese police's reminders!these food prohibited to enter china!

© image | google

if you bring these products that contain thc element when you enter china, your behavior belongs to drug trafficking, no matter you are a chinese citizen or a foreigner! and drug trafficking in china is a kind of criminal offense!

 

in april 2019, a chinese court sentenced a canadian national to death for producing and trafficking the addictive stimulant methamphetamine, amid heightened tension between beijing and ottawa 

 

chinese police's reminders!these food prohibited to enter china!

© image | google

 

chinese police's reminders!these food prohibited to enter china!

drug trafficking is a felony subject to the death penalty in the chinese criminal code.

 

under clause 1, article 347 of the chinese criminal law, those convicted of smuggling, trafficking, transporting, or manufacturing more than 1,000 grams of opium, more than 50 grams of heroin or methamphetamine, or large quantities of other drugs may receive the death penalty.

chinese police's reminders!these food prohibited to enter china!

chinese police's reminders!these food prohibited to enter china!

chinese police's reminders!these food prohibited to enter china!

china to issue new rmb bills in august!

the people’s bank of china announced thursday that the latest 5th series of the 2019 edition renminbi notes will be issued starting august 30.

china to issue new rmb bills in august!

the new patterns, though not very different from existing ones, are designed to be harder for counterfeiters to copy.

 

let’s check it! china to issue new rmb bills in august!

 

china to issue new rmb bills in august!

the design of both the front and the reverse sides of the 5th series of the 2019 edition 50-yuan renminbi bills. 

[photo: china plus]

 

china to issue new rmb bills in august!

the design of both the front and the reverse sides of the 5th series of the 2019 edition 20-yuan renminbi bills. 

[photo: china plus]

 

the new notes will include values of one yuan, 10 yuan, 20 yuan and 50 yuan, along with coins with values of one yuan, 50 cents and ten cent.

 

china to issue new rmb bills in august!

the design of both the front and the reverse sides of the 5th series of the 2019 edition 10-yuan renminbi bills. 

[photo: china plus]

 

the new design is similar to the previous edition, with only minute changes to be made to the printed patterns of both bills and coins.

 

china to issue new rmb bills in august!

the design of both the front and the reverse sides of the 5th series of the 2019 edition one yuan renminbi bills. 

[photo: china plus]

 

the new rmb series will also have an enhanced anti-counterfeit feature, according to an official with china’s central bank.

 

china to issue new rmb bills in august!

the design of both the front and the reverse sides of the 5th series of the 2019 edition one-yuan renminbi coins. 

[photo: china plus]

 

the official also told the press that the latest issuance does not include a new 5-yuan note, which is being tested for new printing technologies in a bid to reduce counterfeiting of the chinese currency.

 

china to issue new rmb bills in august!

the design of both the front and the reverse sides of the 5th series of the 2019 edition 50-cent renminbi coins. 

[photo: china plus]

 

china to issue new rmb bills in august!

the design of both the front and the reverse sides of the 5th series of the 2019 edition ten-cent renminbi coins. 

[photo: china plus]

wechat group admin sentenced to 2 years for…

chinese authorities have sentenced university professor liu pengfei to two years in prison for hosting a blog and a forum on wechat for users to discuss current affairs, chinese media recently confirmed.

 

wechat group admin sentenced to 2 years for...

 

wechat group admin sentenced to 2 years for...

 

liu was sentenced by a district court in chongqing city in southwestern china sometime in june.

 

liu was the creator and administrator of a popular wechat forum named “global report,” in which he and others shared news and commentaries, mostly from websites based outside china that were published in the chinese language.

 

liu’s “global report,” first established as a wechat forum in 2014, aimed to share “different voices” from overseas with chinese internet users, according to chinese media. 

 

as of 2017, the wechat forum has reposted more than 20,000 articles on current affairs, according to radio free asia (rfa). 

 

many touched upon topics deemed “politically sensitive” by beijing, such as uncensored news and international governments’ criticisms of the chinese regime.

 

despite numerous attempts by the regime to shut down “global report” over the years, liu’s forum managed to survive by branching into different chatrooms, amassing a following in the thousands. the blog also changed its website address repeatedly immediately upon being censored.

 

the following day after the arrest, china’s top internet censorship authority, the cyberspace administration of china, issued new regulations, stipulating that creators of online forums and group chats would be held accountable if there are “inappropriate” comments made by users.

wechat group admin sentenced to 2 years for... 

 

web administrators like liu have since been punished, including with account closures, verbal warnings from local police, or arrests and detentions.

 

messages sent between individuals, especially ones shared in popular chat groups, have come under extensive monitoring by china’s internet police since the regulations were put in place.

 

wechat group admin sentenced to 2 years for...

 

pay attention, here are 9 types of prohibited information:

wechat group admin sentenced to 2 years for...

  1. sensitive political topics 

  2. rumors

  3. internal information

  4. pornographic, drug-related or violent information

  5. news about hong kong, macao, and taiwan which hasn’t been issued by the authorities.

  6. military information

  7. documents related to state secrets

  8. unidentified / seemingly fake videos suspected of defaming or insulting the police

  9. other information that breaches relevant laws and regulations 

 

wechat group admin sentenced to 2 years for...

 

according to internet group information service management provisions, issued by cyberspace administration of china on september 7, 2017, the following regulations are vital to wechat group admin:

 

wechat group admin sentenced to 2 years for...

 

article 9: the founders and managers of internet groups shall perform group management responsibilities, to regulate the group’s online conduct and publication of information in accordance with laws, regulations, user agreements, and platform agreements, building a civilized and orderly space for online groups.

 

when internet group members participate in group information exchanges, they shall comply with laws and regulations, interact civilly, and express themselves rationally.

 

internet group information service providers should provide necessary functions and privileges to group founders and managers conducting group management.

 

wechat group admin sentenced to 2 years for...

 

article 10: internet group information service providers and users must not use internet group information services to publish or transmit informational content prohibited by laws, regulations, and relevant state provisions.

 

wechat group admin sentenced to 2 years for...

 

article 11: internet group information service providers shall employ management measures for dealing with internet groups that violate laws, regulations, and relevant state provisions, such as correction warnings, suspension of publication, and closing groups, in accordance with laws and agreements; and shall store relevant records and report to the relevant competent departments.

 

wechat group admin sentenced to 2 years for...

 

internet group information service providers shall employ management measures for dealing with the founders and managers of internet groups that violate laws, regulations, and relevant state provisions, such as lowering credit levels, suspension of publication, and revoking group establishment credentials in accordance with laws and agreements; and shall store relevant records and report to the relevant competent departments.

 

internet group information service providers shall establish a blacklist management system, entering groups, group founders, group managers, and group members to the blacklist for violations of law and agreements where the circumstances are serious, limiting group service functions, storing relevant records, and reporting to the relevant competent departments.

alert! victims lose $4.8m in chinese official scam!

mr. soh panicked when he got a call, purportedly from singtel, telling him his mobile account was going to be terminated, as he had been implicated in a crime.

alert! victims lose $4.8m in chinese official scam!

© image | google

alert! victims lose $4.8m in chinese official scam!

the 33-year-old malaysian, who was working in a wholesale company, headed to liang court to transfer $1,200 on the instruction of an “official” from china, and was about to do so when two police officers at the mall noticed his frantic demeanor and approached him.

alert! victims lose $4.8m in chinese official scam!

© image | google

luckily, their intervention prevented him from becoming another victim of “chinese official” scams and losing the money.

 

figures released by the police on monday (july 1) showed that there were 65 such cases in singapore between january and april involving at least $4.8 million, prompting the police to say that the chinese official scam was making a return. 

 

just over $48,000 of this total was lost in scams involving bitcoin machines, which police said are gaining traction as vehicles for fraudsters.

 

alert! victims lose $4.8m in chinese official scam!

© image | google

most of the victims – such as mr. soh, whose full name was not given – were chinese.

 

mr. soh was behaving in a very panicky manner,” said mr. chang lian seng, the deputy in charge of orchard npc community policing unit. “after withdrawing money, he rushed to the bitcoin machine; that was a telltale sign.”

 

speaking in mandarin, mr. soh said that in future, he would “first verify if such a thing actually happened before making a decision“.

 

alert! victims lose $4.8m in chinese official scam!

 

others have not been as lucky as mr. soh.

 

last year, a chinese student in singapore lost her entire savings of $22,500 when she provided her one-time password and access to her bank account to a scammer.

 

in 2017, a woman lost $5.4 million after she was led to believe she had to surrender all her money to “chinese officials” to assist in investigations.

 

alert! victims lose $4.8m in chinese official scam!

© image | google

in their advisory on monday, the police said that the chinese official scams typically involve scammers who claim to be employees of courier companies or officers from government organizations.

 

they would tell victims that either a mobile number registered in their name was involved in a crime, a parcel under their name containing illegal goods had been detained, there was a pending court case against them or they had committed a criminal offense and were required to assist in investigations.

 

alert! victims lose $4.8m in chinese official scam!

© image | google

 

scammers would ask the victims who received the calls to provide their personal details and bank account information, such as internet banking credentials and one-time passwords for investigation purposes.

 

alert! victims lose $4.8m in chinese official scam!

 

in some of these cases, the call would be transferred to another person claiming to be a police officer from china.

 

alert! victims lose $4.8m in chinese official scam!

© image | google

victims may be shown a copy of a warrant for their arrest from the chinese police and could be threatened with imprisonment if they did not cooperate.

 

the victims then find out that money was transferred from their bank accounts to unknown accounts.

 

there is also a variant of the scam, which involves scammers instructing victims to scan a qr code at bitcoin vending machines and transfer a sum of money using the machines.

alert! victims lose $4.8m in chinese official scam!

alert! victims lose $4.8m in chinese official scam!

© image | google

 

in several cases, victims were told to withdraw money from their bank accounts and hand it over to a “government officer” for verification purposes.

 

the scammers kept the victims on the phone line to ensure that they did not have the opportunity to verify the authenticity of the calls, noted the police.

 

the police advised the public not to panic when they receive such calls, as no government agency would request personal details or a transfer of funds by phone!

 

attention: if you received this kind of calls or messages in wechat or other social media in china or abroad, you should check its identities first, then don’t tell him your bank password or id number as well as something very very important to you, don’t transfer money to him without attention! 

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