Chinese cardboard bun hoax
Encyclopedia
The cardboard-bun hoax was reported in July 2007 on Beijing Television's BTV-7 (the Lifestyle Channel) as an alleged undercover story revealing that street vendors were adding cardboard to their baozi
Baozi
A bāozi or simply known as bao, bau, humbow, nunu, bausak, pow or pau is a type of steamed, filled bun or bread-like item in various Chinese cuisines, as there is much variation as to the fillings and the preparations...

, or pork buns. In the report, footage was shown on the air that implied that local vendors were selling pork dumplings filled with a composite of 60 percent caustic soda-soaked cardboard and 40 percent fatty pork
Pork
Pork is the culinary name for meat from the domestic pig , which is eaten in many countries. It is one of the most commonly consumed meats worldwide, with evidence of pig husbandry dating back to 5000 BC....

. Coming after several product recalls of Chinese products, the report sparked widespread disgust.

On July 18, 2007 Chinese law enforcement officials reported that they had detained Zi Beijia (訾北佳), a local reporter, for allegedly faking the news report. Zi, using the alias Hu Yue (胡月), is believed to have hired four migrant workers to make the cardboard-buns as he filmed. BTV 7 apologized, saying it was "profoundly sorry" for the deception and its "vile impact on society." Beijing's health authorities reported finding no evidence of cardboard in local buns. Furthermore the Beijing Municipal Food Safety Office found that even if baozis are filled with a five percent mixture of cardboard "the fiber substance can be easily seen, and the meat buns made this way could not be easily chewed." Some individuals in China and abroad continue to believe that the scandal was not a hoax, and the Chinese government proclaimed it such merely to assuage a horrified public.

On August 12, 2007, Zi was sentenced to a year in jail and a fine of $132.

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