This Article is From Sep 12, 2018

School Dropout, Posing As Billionaire, Target Of China Crackdown On Fraud

Police in northern China's Shandong province are investigating the suspect, identified by the surname Shi and who called himself the "Sh Runlong Jocker" on social media.

School Dropout, Posing As Billionaire, Target Of China Crackdown On Fraud

Accused is also responsible for a fake state media article, says Xinhua news agency. (Representational)

BEIJING:

China's crackdown on online rumour-mongers and fraud has snared a fresh target - a 17-year-old junior high school dropout who pretended to be a billionaire, gave himself fake titles and posted Photoshopped pictures of himself with world leaders.

Police in northern China's Shandong province said they were investigating the suspect, identified by the surname Shi and one of the characters in his first name, who called himself the "Sh Runlong Jocker" on social media and claimed to be a Chinese New Zealander from Hong Kong.

Shi made false claims about his identity, including that he was a board member of the Japanese Red Cross Society and a director at a fictional Shandong Internet Economic Research Centre. He also circulated fake images of himself with U.S. President Donald Trump, French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Shi is also accused of being responsible for a fake state media article: the official Xinhua news agency said it had discovered a fake article claiming to be from Xinhua that portrayed Shi as a poverty alleviation hero.

"Shi had paid people to write the fake articles and Photoshop fake pictures and posted online...We will punish those who spread rumours online with an adverse impact on the society," the Public Security Bureau in Jinan, capital of Shandong province, said on its official Weibo account.

Shi went viral on Chinese social media websites after his crafted online identify was exposed. Shi's Twitter-like Weibo account, which used to have more than 10,000 followers, could not be found on Wednesday when checked by Reuters.

"The young generation nowadays have too much vanity," one Weibo user said. "They've been spoiled by their families."

© Thomson Reuters 2018
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