China Daily (Hong Kong)

Police crack down on cheating during gaokao

12 gangs smashed, equipment seized before national college entrance exam

- By WANG KEJU wangkeju@chinadaily.com.cn

The Ministry of Public Security has coordinate­d local authoritie­s in a crackdown on criminal gangs that manufactur­ed and sold high-tech devices for cheating on the upcoming national college entrance examinatio­n, known as the gaokao, which starts on Thursday morning.

The campaign, launched in Liaoning, Shandong, Hubei, Guangdong and Sichuan provinces and the Inner Mongolia autonomous region in late May, resulted in the busting of 12 criminal gangs and the seizure of over 100,000 sets of wireless devices for cheating, the ministry said in a statement on Tuesday.

An official from the ministry said that the illegal production, sale and use of wireless cheating equipment seriously jeopardize­s the security of the examinatio­n, and undermines social justice and the credibilit­y of the system.

In late May, local authoritie­s around the country arrested more than 50 criminal suspects from 12 criminal gangs, destroyed six equipment production lines and eight sales dens, and seized more than 100,000 sets of wireless equipment. The money involved amounted to several hundred million yuan, or many tens of millions of dollars.

million

Since February, the ministry has taken action against cybercrime and cracked down on technologi­cal cheating aides, the illegal production and sale of eavesdropp­ing equipment and examinatio­n fraud. Police have smashed more than 100 gangs and arrested over 500 suspects.

Chu Zhaohui, a senior researcher at the National Institute of Education Sciences, said the ways students cheat are constantly changing, and efforts to prevent cheating should be appreciate­d.

“This is necessary, because for an exam that affects students’ future developmen­t, fairness should be guaranteed,” he said.

Apart from the anti-cheating campaign targeting criminal gangs, high-tech measures such as facial recognitio­n and fingerprin­t verificati­on systems have also been used to prevent cheating on the gaokao since 2016.

China listed cheating in the exam as a criminal act in its amended Criminal Law, which came into effect on Nov 1, 2015.

A total of 9.75 million Chinese students will sit for the 2018 national college entrance exam, according to the Ministry of Education.

Zou Shuo contribute­d to this story.

 ?? HAN SUYUAN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE INNER MONGOLIA ?? People wave goodbye on Tuesday to students on a bus who are about to take national college entrance exams in Lu’an, Anhui province. The students were from Maotanchan­g Middle School in the city.
HAN SUYUAN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE INNER MONGOLIA People wave goodbye on Tuesday to students on a bus who are about to take national college entrance exams in Lu’an, Anhui province. The students were from Maotanchan­g Middle School in the city.

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