Companies have been warned to watch out for express delivery
services that charge a fee for delivering government documents
because it could be part of a sting that has already caught out a
number of firms.
The Shanghai Industrial and Commercial Administrative Bureau
said it had received complaints from several companies, including
some joint-ventures, which reported paying for mail sent by the
bureau.
Bureau officials said they had never sent any government
documents that charge receivers.
Companies that have paid the charge reported to the bureau that
it was around 10 yuan (US$1.23).
A Japanese trading company in Pudong New Area received fake
documents from a company called the Shanghai Qirui Express Delivery
Co, according to the bureau.
The document number, seal and receipt were found to be fake.
Qirui Express has not been located because the address and
telephone number on its receipt are fake, the bureau said.
(Shanghai Daily June 9, 2006)