Official from the Guangdong Provincial Bureau of Public Security
yesterday confirmed that some suspects involved in a scandal
concerning more than 400 Japanese male tourists said to have
visited prostitutes in Zhuhai
Special Economic Zone have been detained for questioning.
Without giving a specific figure on the number of suspects and
prostitutes that have been detained, an official with the bureau
who refused to be named said that the police planned a full
investigation of the case.
He said that the hotel where a large number of Japanese
allegedly visited prostitutes has been required to stop business
pending further investigation.
The official also refused to reveal whether the suspects
detained include Japanese tourists or not, saying that the case is
still under investigation.
The provincial public security bureau has established a special
task force to handle the case, the official said.
He reiterated that prostitution is illegal on the Chinese
mainland and police never relent in the fight against illegal
activities in the prosperous province which shares borders with
Hong Kong and Macao.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Kong Quan said Sunday that it is a
disgusting affair and that concerned Chinese authorities are also
investigating the case and will punish the guilty in accordance
with the law.
"Foreign citizens must obey Chinese laws here in China,” Kong
said. On September 16 and 17, more than 400 Japanese male tourists
were suspected by local residents and other tourists of visiting
prostitutes in the Zhuhai International Conference Center Hotel, a
local five-star hotel, said the official, adding that many of them
were seen openly flirting with the suspected prostitutes, even in
the lobby and lifts of the hotel.
The all-male Japanese tourist group, the oldest of which was 37,
also included high school students about 16 years of age, according
to the official.
A hotel manager who gave only his family name Chen told
reporters that the Japanese probably picked up the prostitutes in a
local night club and then brought them back to the hotel for
illegal sex.
The Japanese tourists wanted to raise the Japanese national flag
in the lobby of the hotel but the hotel refused their request, he
added.
Many Chinese people were angered when they heard about the case,
accusing the Japanese of humiliating the Chinese people at the time
when the country was marking the 72nd anniversary of the "September
18 Incident,'' a day of national humiliation for Chinese
people.
Japanese militarists deliberately created the "September 18
Incident" at Liutiaohu near the city of Shenyang, and subsequently
invaded and occupied Northeast China.
The "September 18 Incident" marked the beginning of China's
14-year long bloody war against Japanese aggression.
(China Daily September 29, 2003)