Ministry: ‘Zero tolerance’ for misconduct
The Ministry of Education has zero tolerance for academic misconduct and has ordered education authorities and the universities concerned to investigate plagiarism allegations leveled at actor Zhai Tianlin, a ministry spokeswoman said on Friday.
The investigation will focus not only on the plagiarism allegations, but also possible misconduct of other people that allowed it to happen, ministry spokeswoman Xu Mei said at a news conference.
“We have zero tolerance for behaviors that ignore academic rules and standards and undermine education equality,” she said.
The universities and Beijing education authorities will look into the case and publish the investigation’s results as soon as possible, she added.
The Beijing Education Commission and the Education Work Committee of the Beijing Committee of the Communist Party of China had sent an investigative team to the Beijing Film Academy — where Zhai got his PhD — to look into the matter, the academy said on Thursday.
Zhai, 32, is also a postdoctoral candidate at Peking University. He was accused of plagiarism by a Sina Weibo blogger last week who claimed one of Zhai’s papers, a 2,783-word article, showed a 40.4 percent similarity with other people’s work.
The academy launched its own investigation on Monday. It has completed its preliminary collection of evidence and notified Zhai, adding it will look into other matters uncovered by netizens.
In a public apology posted on Sina Weibo on Thursday, Zhai said, “I lost myself amid a mentality of vanity and good luck.
“After I starred in a few films and TV series, I became full of myself and forgot honesty is the most important principle.
“I will withdraw from postdoctoral research at Peking University and I am deeply sorry to my school, teachers, fans and the public.”