BEIJING, Aug. 12 (Xinhua) -- Zi Beijia, a Chinese
reporter who fabricated a TV news saying that Beijing dumpling makers used
cardboard as a filling, was Sunday sentenced to one year behind bars with a fine
of 1,000 yuan for the crime of "infringing commodity reputation".
The Beijing No. 2 Intermediate People's Court heard
the case in an open court.
According to the court ruling, Zi, 28, was a
temporary employee of the Life Channel of the Beijing Television Station before
being arrested.
In June 2007, he visited some steamed stuffed bun
stands but failed to find any cardboard-filled buns.
For pursuing career achievements, Zi, under an
assumed name of Hu Yue, went to the No.13 courtyard inside Shizikou Village,
Taiyanggong Township of Chaoyang District, and asked four migrant workers who
had been preparing breakfast there to make meat buns for him with a lie that he
will buy the stuffed buns in a large quantity.
The four meat buns makers were identified as Wei
Quanfeng, ZhaoXiaoyan, Zhao Jiangbo and Yang Chunling, all from Huayin, a city
in northwest China's Shaanxi Province.
Then Zi came to the same venue the second time and
brought cameras, pork, flour and cardboard himself.
In order to film the process, Zi is alleged to have
instructed Wei and his fellow villagers to make "baozi" or meat buns by soaking
and crushing discarded cardboard he had collected and mixing it with pork. The
baozi were said to have been fed to dogs.
Zi used a home DVD camera to film the entire process
and turned in his report after he edited it.
Zi hid the truth to the Beijing Television Station,
enabling his program to be aired in a slot known as "Transparency" on July 8 at
the Live Channel of the station. The program caused baneful social effects and
severely ruined the reputation of the relevant commodities, according to the
court ruling.
Zi pledged guilty at the court and said he was
muddled-head at that moment, which cheated Beijing Television Station and the
audience.
Zi made a sincere apology to the audience, Beijing
Television Station and the people concerned. He advised journalistic staff to
learn lessons from him and follow obey journalistic ethics.
The court held that Zi, as a temporary employee of
Beijing Television Station, deliberately fabricated news and hid truth to get
his program aired and caused baneful effects. His behavior of fabricating and
spreading fake news has infringed the reputation of certain food and his
wrongdoing was serious. The verdict was made accordingly.
Meat buns with cardboard fillings in Beijing is hoax

BEIJING, July 19 (Xinhua) -- A widely aired expose of Beijing dumpling makers who used cardboard as a filling was a hoax and police have arrested the reporter, Beijing Television station has said. Full story
Authenticity
reiterated after cardboard bun saga
BEIJING, July 23 (Xinhua) -- China's propaganda
departments on Monday reiterated that all media staff must "strictly follow news
ethics" and persist with the "authenticity of journalism" days after the
infamous cardboard bun expose was labeled a hoax by the government. Full story
Exposure of
"cardboard dumplings" TV hoax leaves bad taste with
Beijingers
BEIJING, July 20 (Xinhua) -- Relief,
disbelief and confusion were evident on the streets of Beijing after the widely
aired TV news report about dumpling makers using cardboard as an ingredient was
exposed as a hoax. Full story