
Hong Kong singer and actor Edison Chen attends a news
conference in Hong Kong yesterday. --China Daily
Hong Kong entertainer Edison Chen said yesterday he was quitting show
business indefinitely after admitting here that he had taken the photos
embarrassing several well-known starlets that had been leaked to the Internet.
The 27-year-old Canadian-born Chinese said he had come back to Hong Kong to
"account for himself and to apologize to those involved in or effected by the
scandal."
Hong Kong entertainer Edison Chen said on Thursday he was quitting show
business indefinitely after admitting here that he had taken the photos
embarrassing several well-known starlets that had been leaked to the Internet.
The 27-year-old Canadian-born Chinese said he had come back to Hong Kong to
"account for himself and to apologize to those involved in or effected by the
scandal."
"These photos had not been shown to people and were never intended to be
shown to anyone," he said.
Hong Kong police were trying to find the first releaser of the photos and had
made several arrests in connection with them. Chen allegedly sent his laptop to
a repair shop, leading to the leak and on-line circulation of the photos.
Mainland police arrested 10 people suspected of allegedly producing, selling
and purchasing discs of nude photos of the Hong Kong star earlier this week.
Three people were given five-day administrative detentions and two others, a
19-year-old man surnamed Jiang and a 27-year-old man surnamed Ma, were under
criminal detention. They were still being questioned by police. The other five
were released.
In addition, a Beijing Internet self-discipline organization has asked the
Chinese Internet search engine Baidu.com to make a public apology for spreading
the photos.
The Beijing Internet News Information Review Council, initiated by the
government-sponsored Beijing Association of Online Media, issued a statement on
Monday criticizing the Nasdaq-listed website's conduct in relation to the
photos.
The statement meanwhile praised other big mainland websites, including
Sohu.com, Sina.com and Netease. Those sites had called for Internet users "not
to download, save and spread the photos" and "to prevent the photos from falling
into the hands of children".
A total of 13 on-line portals on the mainland also issued a joint statement
asking domestic websites to boycott the nude photos.
It urged netizens and website staff to be self-disciplined and prevent the
postings and dissemination of such images by pledging not to download, spread or
speculate on the photos.
So far, more than 40 domestic websites have supported the statement and many
Chinese netizens have pledged not download or spread the Chen photos.