China Daily (Hong Kong)

Law must be strengthen­ed to better protect people’s personal informatio­n

- ON AUG 21,

XU YUYU, AN 18-YEAR-OLD GIRL from Linyi in East China’s Shandong province, received a call from fraudsters who knew she was eligible for a student subsidy and cheated her into remitting 9,900 yuan($1,484) to them. Xu reported the case to local police but died of a heart attack soon afterwards, reportedly as a result of the emotional stress she was under. Five suspects have been detained by the police. Southern Metropolis Daily commented:

The police have been efficient in apprehendi­ng all the six suspects, but such high efficiency is rare. People get fraud calls every day and there are always reports of people being cheated, yet seldom do we hear of cases being solved. Some reports even quote police officers as saying that only 3 percent of such cases are solved.

These fraudsters are only the tip of a ver y large iceberg. It is obvious that Xu’s personal informatio­n had been leaked since the fraudsters knew her cellphone number, her name, and that she could apply for the national student subsidy. Where did they get this informatio­n? Did anybody steal it, or did an official involved with the student subsidies sell her personal informatio­n?

In many other fraud cases, the fraudsters have obtained the personal informatio­n of their vic-

tims. Previous reports show that there is a whole undergroun­d chain of selling citizens’ personal informatio­n.

Our informatio­n is not under protection at all, although the law says it is.

In November, the ninth amendment to the Criminal Law included the leaking of citizens’ informatio­n as a crime, and says those caught doing it should be punished. However, that article lacks executable details.

Legal experts have long been calling for strengthen­ing the protection of personal informatio­n. We hope Xu’s death will propel the national legislator­s to realize how serious the challenge is. It is time to improve the law, and introduce some executable details to curb the rampant leaking of people’s informatio­n and severely punish those who do so.

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