The Nanfang / Blog

Tell the Difference Between Real and Fake Zongzi For Dragon Boat Festival

Posted: 05/29/2014 7:49 pm

While I’m forced to indulge in my secret love of the universally panned mooncake in a darkened room during Mid-Autumn Festival all by myself, Dragon Boat Festival is the carefree holiday of the zongzi (粽子 zòngzi), a glutinous rice dumpling wrapped in leaves. Only a summer holiday like Dragon Boat Festival can have two festive foods and encourage a playful rivalry over which is the superior one: Team Salty or Team Sweet.

However, as Chinese relive an early millennial fad of the Great Zongzi War of Salty Vs Sweet, we need to remind readers that yes, like every other food in China, there are counterfeit versions that you should avoid at all costs.

As you enjoy your short vacation, here are the ways to differentiate between a real zongzi (seen above to the right) and a fake one (left):

  • zongzi that look especially green may have had their leaves dipped in chemicals during the soaking process. The typical chemical additives used are industrial copper sulfate (CuSO4) and copper chloride
  • as seen in the picture above, the leaves of the fake zongzi look unnaturally green. It looks unrealistic in the same way people’s skin looks unrealistic in skin care commercials or on clips of old Max Headroom episodes
  • when steaming regular zongzi, the color of the leaves will darken and get yellow, and the water below will become a light yellow
  • fake zongzi will have a sulphuric smell when cooked, and the water below will turn green like its leaves

We’re sure most people can tell the difference; after all, people lose their appetite when their kitchen smells like the Eye of Sauron. But then, advertisements and pictures on the internet may lead people to have certain expectations on what a zongzi looks like. For example, would you eat this?

Happy Dragon Boat Festival, everyone. Make Qu Yuan proud.

Photos: NMG News, XDKB, Sipac

Haohao

Man in Shenzhen Strips, Threatens to Jump Off Fake Eiffel Tower

Posted: 05/21/2014 9:15 am

Tourists who came to Shenzhen’s Windows of the World, a theme park filled with replicas of famous world landmarks, on May 18 were shocked to find another spectacular view—a naked man perched on top of a replica of the Eiffel Tower, threatening to jump.

The man climbed all the way to the top of the tower and stripped down to his underwear, causing quite a commotion and scaring off some female visitors.  According to a report by Huaxi Metropolis Daily, the man was attempting to get attention after his house in Sichuan Province was demolished by local authorities in a land dispute.

Online images uploaded by witnesses show the man’s body was covered with words like “help”, “Nanchong” (his home city), and “ordinary people”. 

According to flyers distributed at the scene, the 46 year-old man had engaged in a physical confrontation with people working for the local authority over a land dispute. Out of despair, he came to Shenzhen and chose a public way to petition for his alleged grievance. No word on what ultimately happened to the guy.

Earlier in April, Guangzhou complained that residents from other provinces and cities came to the city and tarnished its image with an increasing number of petition-seeking bridge jumpers. We figure we will see a similar report from Shenzhen soon.

 

Haohao

600 Tons of Fake Salt Sold in Guangzhou

Posted: 05/15/2014 8:00 am

As incredible as it sounds, you don’t need to take a grain of it with this news: Guangzhou residents may have consumed a total of 600 tons of inedible fake table salt from February until May of this year.

A report by China News on May 13 revealed the fake salt had been distributed at wholesaling markets in exchange for grains and cooking oil in the rural outskirts of Guangzhou.

A Guangzhou-based group had been producing and distributing the fake salt since February and had profited more than RMB 1 million (approximately USD $160 thousand) from the illegal trade. It’s unclear if the group had started the operation earlier than reported.

Most of the salt in question was non-iodized industrial salt, but the group packed it as iodized table salt under a brand name only revealed in the report as a single character, Yue (粤, meaning “Guangdong” or “Cantonese”).

Small consumption of iodine over a long period of time will increase the risks of contracting ailments such as thyroid nodule, a lump in the thyroid gland at the base of the neck, whereas the consumption of industrial salt, which contains excessive levels of metals, can cause more health problems.

A May 5 police raid on the fake salt production in Baiyun District led to the arrests of three suspects. At the time of the police operation, the racket was still busy processing the salt. The police confiscated more than six tons of salt, 12 bags of industrial salt and some machinery on the site.

Photos: Nandu 

Haohao

Fake Designer Bag Workshops Thrive in Guangzhou, Protected by Officials

Posted: 05/9/2014 10:24 am

A single workshop hidden in a supermarket deep in a back alley in Yongtai Village in Baiyun District is responsible for producing more than 100 fake Prada bags per day, and sells over 3,000 fake Prada bags every monthreported the Guangzhou Daily after conducting an investigation into several of Guangzhou’s fake designer handbag workshops.

To put these figures into perspective: In just one factory alone, approximately 30 workers in a single 200-square-meter workshop are responsible for creating revenue worth millions of yuan each year by production of these knockoffs.

READ: Fake Hermes Factory Busted, Ring Leader Given Life in Prison

In the same village, a police raid tipped by the newspaper led to the seizure of 42 finished Prada handbags, 60 semi-finished bags, 300 metal products and 250 labels. However, the confiscation is believed to be much smaller than the total number of counterfeit goods. When the officers’ car pulled over near the workshop, several lookouts had allegedly warned the workshop by phone, giving the workers enough time to pack away the main stacks.

The workshop has 10 work stations, and each has 25 assembly lines, the report said. In contrast to the other workshop, it did not specify this particular workshop’s production capacity.

Knockoff bag handbag guangzhou counterfeit shanzhai fake luxury

In Xinyang Village in Huadu District, a workshop was busy producing highly authentic-looking Chanel bags. Workers here have clear divisions of work. Workers on the second floor were cutting large chunks of leather into small pieces, while the ones on the third floor were gluing labels onto the bags. The reporter discovered that all the products were transported to Tianhong Leather Market 918 by tailing the workshop’s loaded cargo trucks.

One worker named Liu Wei (a pseudonym), who had worked in a similar workshop in Huadu for more than 10 years, told the newspaper that the workshops often first obtain sketches from an intermediary website, and then skilled workers like Liu begin to train junior staff on production techniques before manufacturing.

The process of making the bags often begins with study or research, and ends with pounding metal hardware into leather bags, the last and most important procedure, Liu said. Only a few are allowed to work on the last step, he said.

RELATED: Knock-Off Mobile Phone Makers Run Into Trouble in Shenzhen

According to Liu, the knockoffs are categorized into several grades with AA grade being the best, and then followed by A gradeB grade, and C grade.

Knockoff bag handbag guangzhou counterfeit shanzhai fake luxury

AA grade goods are strictly manufactured based on the real deal, sticking to the “1:1” principal.

A knockoff rated at A grade bears 95 percent resemblance to the authentic product. Most of the A grade counterfeit workshops are located in Yongtai, Jiahe, Yonghe in Baiyun District, and most of the products are distributed in Baiyun leather market.

B grade goods bear 90 percent resemblance to the real one, and most of the workshops are in Shiling, Huadu and are mainly sold in Sanyuanli leather market.

Wang Jun, who runs a workshop in Yongzhou, says he produces highly authentic designer handbags. He told the newspaper that an A grade or Extra A grade bag can sell between RMB 2000 and RMB 8000.

RELATED: 140,000 Fake Viagra Pills Seized in Shenzhen

Workers producing highly authentic bags earn a monthly salary of RMB 5,000; some can make close to RMB 10,000 a month. Police raids to these knockoff workshops are frequent, but often are only halfheartedly enforced. Wang said it only cost around RMB 100,000 to restart the business after a police visit.

Chen Tan, dean of Guangzhou University’s public management department, told the newspaper that local economic GDP growth is probably one of the reasons fueling the illicit trade.

“In some morbid way, several regions are actually encouraging their ‘knockoff reputations’ in order to sustain GDP growth and other complicated interests. They let the trade develop as it is, and some have developed into highly authentic knockoff villages. We do not rule out the possibility that some lower-tiered officials are protecting the local workshops,” Chen said.

It’s unknown how much money the knockoff bag trade is contributing to Guangzhou’s GDP. But based on the ubiquity of seeing counterfeit bags at the city’s leather markets, we can extrapolate this amount to not be insignificant.

Also read:
Report Uncovers Unlicensed Stores Selling Smuggled Fake Over-the-Counter Drugs
Phew! Images of Disemboweled Tiger in Guangzhou Were Fake
China, Land of the Fake…Policeman?
26 Tons of Inedible “Fake” Sale Seized in Guangzhou

Photos: Guangzhou Daily 

Haohao

Explosion On Shenzhen Metro Line 4 Caused by External Smartphone Battery

Posted: 05/8/2014 4:20 pm

A subway train had to stop suddenly and passengers evacuated after a fire broke out at the rear of a train on Line 4 of the Shenzhen Metro, reports the Shenzhen Evening Report.

The incident occurred at 11:33am, and suspended subway service from Lianhua North Station to Futian Checkpoint, affecting transfer stations along Lines 1, 2 and 3.

A source with the firefighters on the scene confirmed the fire as the result of an explosion originating from a external battery charger for a cell phone.

No injuries were reported. Trains resumed normal operations as of 12:24pm.

Cheap aftermarket batteries seem like a bargain in comparison to the high cost of smartphones that keep rolling out with new models every year. However, the savings may be hazardous as shown on numerous occasions.

An iPhone 5 user in Thailand said his phone exploded while taking a call. Kirsten Zastrow reported the Anker replacement battery in her Nexus S phone exploded when recharging it at night. Wu Jiantong fell into a coma after being shocked by his iPhone4, while Ma Ailun complained she received an electric shock when taking a call while her phone was charging.

Always answer when opportunity knocks, but use caution when receiving incoming calls.

Photo: Paperblog
Products appearing in photo are not necessarily concerned with products associated with this story, which have not been disclosed.

Haohao

Report uncovers unlicensed stores selling smuggled, fake over-the-counter drugs

Posted: 04/8/2014 7:44 pm

Residents of Guangzhou that are concerned about the food they are eating may also want to start paying attention to the over the counter medication they are taking.

A report by Nandu has delved into the grey morass that are stores in Guangzhou that are selling popular Hong Kong medicines and products, but are going outside established guidelines. Their report detailed three main discrepancies that suggest something sinister is going on with the selling of these products:

Price discrepancies: Popular medical products that can’t be found in convenience stores have found a niche in “Hong Kong import stores” in which goods said to be imported line the shelves. However, prices for Wood Lock Medicated Balm (黄道益活络油) can range wildly in price from 30 to 50 yuan. A store named “Huimei” is selling the balm for 38 yuan, while it’s competitor is selling it for 58 yuan. Another popular product called Bo Ying Compound (余仁生保婴丹) normally costs 82 yuan in convenience stores, but can reach prices of 108 yuan, making a difference of about 26 yuan

No certification: All stores in China need a certificate of authorization to sell such medical products, something that many of these “Hong Kong import stores” lack. When confronted with such a question, one store manager responded with:

The drugs we sell aren’t western drugs; those require a prescription. Chinese prepared medicine are those that can be taken by anyone. This is the reason why we don’t need a certificate.

Source of goods unknown: Details point to these goods being either smuggled or counterfeit, a point proven to be the latter in two recent cases uncovered by authorities in Zhuhai.

Consumers looking to stay away from buying smuggled or counterfeit goods should make purchases from licensed stores selling goods at fixed prices.

Photo: Nandu

Haohao

140,000 fake Viagra pills seized in Shenzhen

Posted: 04/2/2014 8:46 am

You can’t rely on the blue pills for performance…not from the ones sold from this illegal drug production facility in Shenzhen.

Shenzhen drug administration and Shekou police department seized a total of 140,000 contraband Viagra pills worth more than RMB 5 million ($806,000) at a counterfeit drug wholesaling den, Shenzhen Business Daily reported on April 1.

The raid came after the Shekou police department received a tip from an anonymous source saying that fake Viagra was being sold online to buyers throughout China. On March 24, after identifying that the suspects were operating from a residential building on Qianhai Road in Nanshan district, the police raided the operation and arrested three suspects.

Testing results from the Shenzhen drug administration confirmed the drugs as counterfeit. The fake Viagra pills was found to mimic the effects of the Pfizer-made drug designed to help cure erectile dysfunction.

According to Pfizer’s senior scientist Amy Callanan, the bogus blue pills may contain chalk, brick dust, paint, or pesticides. In an extreme case, counterfeit pills sold to South Korea that originated in China were found to contain human fetuses, Bloomberg Business Week reported.

If results are reliable, the real pills could help prevent cancer, according to researchers at Guangdong’s Sun Yat Sen University.

Home page photo from Security Industry

Haohao

Fake iPhone chargers: Cheap, dangerous, and can be purchased anywhere

Posted: 07/18/2013 7:00 am

When flight attendant Ma Ailun was killed after being electrocuted while using her iPhone when it was still on the charger, a CCTV report concluded that her death was probably caused by using an unauthorised (shanzhai) charger.

On Tuesday, an investigative reporter from Guangzhou Daily went into Shenzhen’s Huaqiangbei area and discovered just how easy it is to mistakenly buy a shanzhai charger and looked into exactly how dangerous the chargers can be.

Although in 2011, Xinhua reported that China’s shanzhai industry was declining, and one third of the estimated 3,000 sellers of shanzhai products in Huaqiangbei had left the business, it is still remarkably easy to buy shanzhai products in the area.

Since Ma Ailun’s death, blogger Ken Shirriff has argued that it is completely plausible that a shanzhai charger was responsible for her death. In his blog post “Tiny, cheap, and dangerous: Inside a (fake) iPhone charger,” he states:

There’s 340 volts DC inside the charger, which is enough to kill. In a cheap charger, there can be less than a millimeter separating this voltage from the output, a fraction of the recommended safe distance. These charger sometimes short out, which could send lethal voltage through the USB cable. If the user closes the circuit by standing on a damp floor or touching a grounded metal surface, electrocution is a possibility.

However, there is another possible cause of Ma’s electrocution. Shenzhen Daily has it that the charger may have been intended for use in Japan and malfunctioned because of voltage problems. China has a 220-volt standard. Japan has a standard of 100 volts.

Buy your chargers from reputable stores.

Haohao

Fake Hermes factory busted, ring leader given life in prison

Posted: 08/30/2012 7:00 am

Even though China is slowly making the transition from specializing in cheap knock-off products to producing its own high-level brands, “made in China” is still synonymous with shoddy goods.

A few days ago, according to Yangcheng Evening News, a gang making fake Hermes totaling over RMB100 million was busted and the court sentenced its leader to life in prison on August 6. Other members were given sentences ranging from seven to ten years and some received fines.

An investigation found the leader of the gang, Xiao, rented a 500 square meter room in a factory in Heyuan last year and ran his counterfeiting business there. Xiao bought the tools and raw materials for bags from Dongguan and Guangzhou. The fake Hermes were sold in Guangzhou.

Xiao has been targeted since February this year when he was first caught by Heyuan’s Administration of Industry and Commerce. After that, the case was transferred to the local public security organs on file. However, driven by huge profits, Xiao continued his counterfeiting activities and rented another 350 square meters of factory space after the first was closed down.

Xiao and his fellow gang members refused to comment on whether they would appeal the sentence.

Guangdong, a thriving manufacturing hub where many manufacturers and exporters are located, has had regular problems with fake and counterfeit goods flooding the market. These goods are known in Chinese as shanzhai. Phones, especially iPhones and iPads, and other shanzhai brands such as Louis Vuitton, Dior and Swatch have proved popular.

The good news is for global brands, however, is Guangdong’s is making progress on cracking down on fake goods.  Related news reports indicate nearly 20,000 similar cases have been busted and 2,950 dens destroyed.

Haohao

iPhone… er… HiPhone 5 now on sale in Shenzhen for a mere $31

Posted: 08/16/2011 11:48 am

HiPhone 5

We know there are a lot of Apple fans out there, judging by the number of MacBooks, iPhones and iPads we see at hipster hangouts across the PRD. The good news for you guys is the iPhone 5 is right around the corner. They are likely being assembled, as we speak, a few blocks from here in Foxconn’s Shenzhen factory.

The latest news is the iPhone 5 will be released sometime in October, which is well over a year after the iPhone 4 was made available to the public. That’s right, the iPhone 4 is getting a bit long in the tooth. So if you can’t wait until iPhone 5 is released, then we suggest perhaps considering the HiPhone 5. Details from one of our favorite sites, Shanzai (which we believe is a pinyin spelling error):

At the very first sight you will really get confused as it’s the Apple’s upcoming iPhone because the hiPhone 5 is based on the leaked dimensions and design of iPhone 5. Although not much info about the hiPhone 5 is available it looks thinner than the iPhone 4 and comes with less rounded edges. The hiPhone 5 comes in multiple colors like black, white, pink and red. For sure, hiPhone 5 is four times cheaper than the original.

Although Apple is madly chasing behind everyone accusing for violating its patents, the smartphone giant is helpless to prevent all these Chinese pirated products.

Those linked dimensions the article refers to point to a bigger screen, thinner device (of course) and more rounded back. The HiPhone 5 incorporates all of these into a price point that makes sense for Shenzhen’s multitude of computer markets.

If you want to take one of these devices for a spin, you can find them on Taobao for about RMB 204-275.

 

Haohao
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