The Global Times, which is affiliated with the Communist Party, cited a police officer with the Lujiang county public security bureau as confirming the case was under investigation, but did not confirm if a suspect had been arrested, according to The Huffington Post.
The images, which went viral on Weibo last week, have sparked so much attention on the micro-blogging site that the State Council Information Office, China's top web censor, has stepped in. It has issued an official directive stating that 'all websites must stop following and hyping the so-called "Lujiang Indecent Photos Incident."'
The Global Times, which is affiliated with the Communist Party, cited a police officer with the Lujiang county public security bureau as confirming the case was under investigation, but did not confirm if a suspect had been arrested, according to The Huffington Post.
ReplyDeleteThe images, which went viral on Weibo last week, have sparked so much attention on the micro-blogging site that the State Council Information Office, China's top web censor, has stepped in.
It has issued an official directive stating that 'all websites must stop following and hyping the so-called "Lujiang Indecent Photos Incident."'