The boyfriend, named only as 25-year-old Xiaoqiang, denied the charges,
claiming that he had been “framed”. The couple separated in 2010.
The court rejected the graduate’s claim, saying the “proof came from
overseas [and] it did not conform with China’s judicial procedures.” Mo
Shaoping, a criminal law professor from the Central University of Finance
and Economics, told China’s Global Times newspaper, said: “Evidence
from the UK should first be certified by British notary agencies, and then
it goes to the Chinese embassy or consulates there. Only then is it eligible
to be presented in a Chinese court.”
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