Global Times

Toilet paper bandits strip 1,500 rolls from Chengdu park

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China’s notorious toilet paper thieves have struck again, stripping a Chengdu park of 1,500 rolls of paper in just one week, leading the park to consider installing facial recognitio­n machines to beat the penny- pinching paper bandits.

As a part of efforts in the nationwide “toilet revolution” campaign, management at the People’s Park in Chengdu, Southwest China’s Sichuan Province, started providing free toilet paper in all its stalls on April 8.

However, the park authoritie­s found that the first batch of 1,500 rolls of paper were gone in seven days, the Chengdu Business Daily reported Sunday.

Feng Huiling, secretary of the park’s Party branch, told the newspaper that an investigat­ion found that 30 bathroom stalls were emptied of paper in just one hour. Toilet paper use far exceeded expectatio­ns.

The toilet paper thieves may cost the park up to 100,000 yuan ($ 14,528) a year, said Feng, adding that some tourists have even been caught dismantlin­g toilets’ pedal flush handles to “sell them for money.”

Feng said that if the problem continues, they may follow the example of Beijing’s Tiantan Park and install machines with face scanners to regulate use.

Media reports did not say how many visitors the park had received in the seven- day period. The park charges no entrance fee.

Tiantan Park, home to the Temple of Heaven, introduced six high- tech dispensers that dole out toilet paper only after conducting a facial scan, The Beijing News reported in March.

The pilot program kicked off recently after the authoritie­s faced an increasing number of local residents raiding the park’s restrooms for toilet paper. Tourists now must allow the machine to scan their faces before it dispenses a 60- centimeter serving of toilet paper. The software will deny the same person another helping of toilet paper within nine minutes of their first scan.

Tiantan Park claims a total of 30 rolls of paper were used in just one toilet on one day in winter, the majority of which were stolen, the Beijing Evening News reported in March.

“Sometimes we have to refill the toilet paper every 20 minutes,” a park attendant was quoted as saying.

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