Young Chinese Woman Gets Death Threats for Posting Negative Review

She received a menacing phone call and ominous funerary items.
Young Chinese Woman Gets Death Threats for Posting Negative Review
A woman works online in her cubicle at an office in Beijing on February 4, 2010. FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/Getty Images
|Updated:

When you’re in China, be careful who you displease on the Internet.

Early this March, Ms. Cao (pronounced “tsao”), a 20-year old woman in central China, posted a negative product review for two theme park tickets she had bought on Taobao, a popular Chinese shopping website similar to eBay. Due to mistakes on the supplier’s end, however, staff refused to let her boyfriend into the park for over an hour, thinking his ticket was invalid.

The mood of her date darkened, Cao left a scathing comment on the seller’s feedback page.

Soon thereafter, the seller contacted her and offered her 50 yuan (about $7) for her to delete the post. When she refused, she received a threatening phone call, Chutian Metroplis Daily reported.

On the phone, the seller called Cao an “unreasonable slut” and menaced her, saying that he was near her location.  

Then, on March 4, Cao received two ominous packages in the mail, she told Chutain Metropolis Daily. One was a funeral couplet, and the other was a spirit tablet used to mourn the departed. 

The funeral couplet (via Chutian Metroplish Daily)
The funeral couplet via Chutian Metroplish Daily
Juliet Song
Juliet Song
Author
Juliet Song is an international correspondent exclusively covering China news for NTD. She primarily contributes to NTD's "China in Focus," covering U.S.-China relations, the Chinese regime's human rights abuses, and domestic unrest inside China.