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11 Dec 2025 4:20
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  •   Home > News > Law and Order

    Chinese police offer cash bounty for information that helps arrest Taiwanese influencers Wen Tzu-yu and Chen Po-yuan

    The pair are accused of spreading "anti-China" content after releasing a documentary last year, which detailed Beijing's attempts at using influencers to court public support for unification.


    Chinese police have offered bounties of more than $53,000 for help arresting Taiwanese influencers Wen Tzu-yu and Chen Po-yuan on allegations that the pair disseminated "anti-China" content online.

    The two men "acted as enforcers and accomplices" of Taiwan independence and caused a "severely negative impact", the police statement said, urging the public to provide information on them.

    Beijing considers Taiwan part of its own territory and has not ruled out using force to bring the island under its control.

    However, authorities in Taiwan criticised the reward offers as being "just for show" as Beijing does not exercise effective jurisdiction over the self-ruled democratic island.

    Chinese authorities did not specify which content they were referring to, but Mr Wen in December uploaded a documentary featuring Mr Chen on the topic of Beijing courting popular Taiwanese influencers to promote unification.

    The social media creators had "viciously attacked and smeared the mainland's preferential policies toward Taiwan", police from Quanzhou, in China's eastern Fujian province, said in a statement.

    People who offer effective leads, or assist in the pair's capture, will be eligible for monetary rewards ranging from 50,000 to 250,000 yuan ($10,000 to $53,500).

    The two-part documentary, which delved into all-expenses-paid trips offered to Taiwanese influencers with large followings, was viewed millions of times.

    It sparked outrage domestically among groups opposed to Beijing's interference in Taiwanese politics.

    Both men, in separate statements on social media, dismissed the threats.

    "I stand up for myself. The greater the wind, the more stable I am," Mr Chen wrote.

    Mr Wen said he had only seen the news after waking up.

    "So it seems I have become Puma Shen," he added, referring to the ruling party MP China began investigating last month for alleged "separatist" activity.

    Taiwan on Thursday said the "so-called reward notice" was "just for show".

    "Everyone knows that the accusation against them is basically that they are advocating Taiwan independence, and basically, for the CCP, this kind of charge doesn't require evidence at all," said Liang Wen-chieh, deputy minister of Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council.

    "The reward is merely for show, and it also serves to create division and conflict within Taiwanese society," Mr Liang added.

    China in October also opened a probe into Puma Shen, a prominent Taiwanese lawmaker it has previously sanctioned, for alleged criminal "separatist activities".

    The public security bureau of South-Western Chongqing said it had "decided to open a case for investigation" into Shen and will "pursue his criminal responsibility in accordance with the law".

    ABC/wires


    ABC




    © 2025 ABC Australian Broadcasting Corporation. All rights reserved

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