logo
China widens kindergarten lead poisoning investigation as central government gets involved

China widens kindergarten lead poisoning investigation as central government gets involved

China has expanded the probe into a
kindergarten lead poisoning scandal that has shocked the nation, with the central government getting involved in a rare intervention in a provincial investigation.
Advertisement
On Saturday night the authorities in Gansu said the investigation would be led by provincial leaders working alongside a task force from the State Council, the country's cabinet.
Last week, Chinese media reported that 233 of 251 children at the kindergarten in Tianshui, a second-tier city in the northwestern province,
were found to have abnormal blood lead levels
Parents said local tests had not highlighted that anything was amiss and the problem only came to light when the children were tested in another province.
The local police said on Tuesday that the kindergarten was suspected of using inedible paint to add colour to food and had detained eight people, including the principal.
Advertisement
The provincial investigation team is headed by party chief Hu Changsheng and governor Ren Zhenhe, working alongside other officials, police and party discipline inspectors.
Experts from the national environmental and health ministries and a task force from the state council's food safety commission will also be involved, the statement said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Phone scams in Hong Kong up 22% in first 5 months of year but losses down
Phone scams in Hong Kong up 22% in first 5 months of year but losses down

South China Morning Post

time10 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Phone scams in Hong Kong up 22% in first 5 months of year but losses down

The number of phone scam cases in Hong Kong rose by nearly 22 per cent between January and May compared with the same period last year, but losses fell by almost two-thirds to HK$430 million (US$54.8 million) as fewer mainland Chinese students were cheated, police said. Chief Inspector Grace Wong Chi-man of the force's Anti-Deception Coordination Centre said police had recorded 2,574 phone scams in the first five months of 2025, with a 45 per cent year-on-year drop in cases involving mainland students, who typically were swindled out of large sums, contributing to the fall in overall losses. 'It's the direct result of the number of students impacted in these cases. In each case, they're not losing a few thousand, but millions in some cases. The reduction in the number of victims is a major contribution to the amount lost,' Wong said. The 2,574 scams recorded from January to May marked a nearly 22 per cent increase over 2,112 cases in the same period last year. The HK$430 million lost was a 64 per cent year-on-year drop from HK$1.2 billion in 2024. In the 49 cases where mainland students were victims, losses were HK$44 million, about 10 per cent of the total over the five-month period. The amount lost was 45 per cent less than the HK$81 million stolen over the same period last year. However, Wong warned that it was still necessary to promote greater awareness among mainland students before the new academic year began between August and October.

‘Monster' China mum sells sons for US$11,600 to tip live-streaming hosts, buy clothes
‘Monster' China mum sells sons for US$11,600 to tip live-streaming hosts, buy clothes

South China Morning Post

timea day ago

  • South China Morning Post

‘Monster' China mum sells sons for US$11,600 to tip live-streaming hosts, buy clothes

A mother in China has sparked public outrage after it was revealed that she sold her two biological sons to fund tips for live-streaming hosts. Advertisement The errant mother even went as far as deliberately conceiving the second child solely for the purpose of selling it. Huang, 26, is originally from Guangxi province in southern China and only has a primary school education. She later moved to Fuzhou, Fujian province, in southeastern China and made a living doing odd jobs. Young mother Huang was reported to the authorities for suspected fraud in April. Photo: CCTV Reports suggest that Huang was an adopted child and, due to her lack of education and care from her adoptive parents, left home at an early age.

China widens kindergarten lead poisoning investigation as central government gets involved
China widens kindergarten lead poisoning investigation as central government gets involved

South China Morning Post

timea day ago

  • South China Morning Post

China widens kindergarten lead poisoning investigation as central government gets involved

China has expanded the probe into a kindergarten lead poisoning scandal that has shocked the nation, with the central government getting involved in a rare intervention in a provincial investigation. Advertisement On Saturday night the authorities in Gansu said the investigation would be led by provincial leaders working alongside a task force from the State Council, the country's cabinet. Last week, Chinese media reported that 233 of 251 children at the kindergarten in Tianshui, a second-tier city in the northwestern province, were found to have abnormal blood lead levels Parents said local tests had not highlighted that anything was amiss and the problem only came to light when the children were tested in another province. The local police said on Tuesday that the kindergarten was suspected of using inedible paint to add colour to food and had detained eight people, including the principal. Advertisement The provincial investigation team is headed by party chief Hu Changsheng and governor Ren Zhenhe, working alongside other officials, police and party discipline inspectors. Experts from the national environmental and health ministries and a task force from the state council's food safety commission will also be involved, the statement said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store