DHAKA: China has punished 197 people in a special campaign by police targeting online rumors about China’s stock market, the recent fatal explosions in Tianjin and ‘other key events’.
China state media reported, says Al Jazeera.
No details of the punishments were given, but according to the report, the crimes punished included claiming a man had jumped to his death in Beijing due to the stock market slump and falsifying the number of people who had died in the Tianjin blasts.
Another alleged crime involved circulating ‘seditious’ rumors about China’s upcoming commemorations of the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II.
A financial journalist ‘confessed’ to causing ‘panic and disorder’ on China’s stock market and inflicting ‘huge losses on the country’, state media reported on Sunday.
Wang Xiaolu, a journalist with Caijing magazine, was detained by Chinese authorities following China’s recent stock market crash.
Wang was held for fabricating and spreading fake information on securities and futures market, according to Xinhua, a state-run news agency.
According to the report, Wang ‘confessed’ that his ‘false information’ had ‘caused panics and disorder at (the) stock market, seriously undermined the market confidence, and inflicted huge losses on the country and investors’.
Wang wrote a story in July saying the securities regulator was studying plans for government funds to exit the market.
The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) quickly denied the Caijing story, labeling it ‘irresponsible’.
But Caijing said it ‘defended journalists’ rights to do their duty under the law’, according to a statement posted on its website.
BDST: 1254 HRS, AUG 31, 2015
RR