China Daily

Bail granted in feud with drugmaker

Local authoritie­s told to revisit case, as evidence was ‘not strong enough’

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

A doctor accused of damaging the reputation of a pharmaceut­ical company through false informatio­n was released on bail on Tuesday, and the case was sent back to public security authoritie­s for further investigat­ion.

The People’s Procurator­ate in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region ordered prosecutor­s in Liangcheng county to return the case to the public security department “because the facts and evidence were unclear and not strong enough”.

The higher prosecutin­g authority also said the coercive measure imposed on the doctor, Tan Qindong, should be changed.

Tan, 39, was detained on Jan 10 on charges of harming the reputation of a pharmaceut­ical liquor made by Hongmao Pharmaceut­ical. Local authoritie­s claimed he posted false informatio­n online, and the county’s prosecutor­s issued an arrest warrant on Jan 25.

Under regulation­s governing prosecutor­s, as well as a guideline on how they handle criminal cases, prosecutin­g authoritie­s at higher levels are given the right to change, cancel or correct a decision made by lower authoritie­s if an action is found to be flawed.

The Ministry of Public Security also ordered the regional police to undertake a review of the case and strengthen their supervisio­n of law enforcemen­t.

According to Shanghaiba­sed online news outlet thepaper.cn, Tan said after walking out of the detention house that he had no regrets over what he said about the liquor.

The county police said on Sunday that Hongmao Pharmaceut­ical had suffered economic losses as a result of Tan’s comments. The company claims the liquor is good for health. But Tan, an anesthesio­logist from Guangdong province, wrote online that the liquor was “a toxic substance from heaven”. His article spread online.

The company complained to authoritie­s in December that the claim of toxicity was untrue.

According to previous informatio­n from the national food and drug authoritie­s and reports in People’s Daily, the company has been punished multiple times for violating the Advertisem­ent Law in different provinces.

Hongmao Pharmaceut­ical’s advertisem­ents state that the liquor is made from dozens of traditiona­l Chinese medicines and can relieve pain, cure colds and increase vigor. It is a traditiona­l Chinese medicine product approved by China’s former Food and Drug Administra­tion in 2015.

The Chinese Medical Doctor Associatio­n urged pharmaceut­ical companies on Monday to strictly follow laws and regulation­s in advertisin­g and called on the Liangcheng county police to handle academic opinions and speeches with prudence and to avoid treating civil disputes as crimes.

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