China Daily (Hong Kong)

Employee who bragged about wealth on WeChat suspended

- By YANG ZEKUN yangzekun@chinadaily.com.cn

A 28-year-old equity manager in Jiangxi province who made provocativ­e posts online about his personal wealth and powerful family has been suspended from his job amid an ongoing investigat­ion, according to an official statement.

Recently, screenshot­s of WeChat posts made by Zhou Jie, who claimed to be an employee of Jiangxi State-owned Capital Operation Holding Group, went viral.

The screenshot­s showed him bragging about his family’s wealth and discussing his father’s job promotion.

The incident drew widespread criticism and speculatio­n online with many netizens wondering whether Zhou’s family had accumulate­d its wealth from corruption and whether his father was promoted through abuse of power.

The company issued a statement on Tuesday night saying that the posts on Zhou’s WeChat were first published two years ago.

Zhou’s father, 59, is a fourth-level investigat­or in the freight logistics division of Jiangxi’s comprehens­ive transporta­tion developmen­t center.

His father used to work in the passenger and cargo transport division of Jiangxi’s former highway transport administra­tion and was promoted to his current position in September 2020.

The investigat­ion showed that his promotion was in line with regulation­s, according to the company.

The statement said that Zhou and

his parents bought six houses with a total area of 705 square meters from 2006 to 2022, for which they collective­ly paid about 6.55 million yuan ($968,500).

They also bought two shops comprising about 82.7 square meters for a total of 1.91 million yuan. They are currently repaying a 2.53 million yuan loan.

Additional­ly, Zhou posted that a provincial-level official once offered him cigarettes and that he drank tea worth 400,000 yuan per kilogram. These stories are false, the statement said.

On Monday, the company issued a notice saying that Zhou made the posts on his WeChat moments from September 2019 to June 2020, and that the content was later forwarded by others.

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