'Sick notes' for sale as World Cup fever grips China

June 19, 2014 12:16 pm | Updated May 23, 2016 07:00 pm IST - BEIJING:

Chinese football fans in high spirits as they watch the opening football match between Brazil and Croatia of the 2014 FIFA World Cup, in Xuchang, north China's Henan province. File photo

Chinese football fans in high spirits as they watch the opening football match between Brazil and Croatia of the 2014 FIFA World Cup, in Xuchang, north China's Henan province. File photo

The 11-hour time difference between China and Brazil has given Chinese wheeler-dealers a lucrative opportunity selling fake sick notes to football fans staying up all night to watch World Cup games.

A search by AFP for "Beijing" and "sick notes service" returned 49,500 results on Chinese search engine Baidu on Thursday, with vendors providing photocopies of hospital certificates with official stamps and doctor's signatures in their "product catalogue".

But the country's biggest online consumer-to-consumer platform Taobao banned searches for "World Cup" and "sick notes" after a surge in offers of the certificates in recent days, the Beijing Youth Daily reported this week.

Nonetheless sellers have kept business going on China's Twitter-like Sina Weibo and other social networking websites.

"The World Cup is coming and the huge time difference may affect Chinese football fans' watching all the games. I hereby launch the sick notes providing service to meet the demand," a user with the online handle "Guitarist playing a Ukulele" wrote on May 30.

The soon-to-be-unwell can pick from a range of illnesses, from fever and fractures to abortion and Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome -- the infectious disease that caused hundreds of fatalities in China in 2003.

"I run the business honestly and will keep your order an absolute secret," said the user.

Sick notes are mostly sold at 20 yuan ($3.20) each on one social networking website popular among students and graduates, the Beijing Youth Daily report said.

A seller said she sold around 30 notes every day and posted pictures of piles of delivery receipts as evidence, it said. Another vendor told the paper: "Many people buy this. It's very reliable."

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