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Liu Yinyue said her mother-in-law received her salary despite never showing up to work and had accumulated assets
The Agricultural Development Bank of China investigated but said it found no evidence of illegal activity
A state-owned bank in China cleared an employee of wrongdoing following an internal investigation after a woman accused her of accumulating assets and receiving a salary despite barely working.
A video post from Liu Yinyue went viral and she accused her former mother-in-law, Xia Xuehua, who works at Agricultural Development Bank of China, of collecting suspicious assets.
The accusations placed Xia and her husband, surnamed Li, who works at Zhongyuan Agricultural Insurance Company, a state-owned insurance firm, under the spotlight. The insurance company told the Beijing Youth Daily that Li is under investigation amid the accusations made in Liu's video.
Liu Yinyue claimed her mother in-law took advantage of the Agricultural Development Bank of China. Photo: Baidu © Provided by South China Morning Post Liu Yinyue claimed her mother in-law took advantage of the Agricultural Development Bank of China. Photo: Baidu
Liu said: "[Xia] did not go to work at all this year, but she still received her salary every month. She has grabbed her share of the state assets."
Liu also claimed Xia, "has eight flats, nine shops and four cars. They only use and wear luxury brands." She added that two of the family's cars are Mercedes-Benz, one is BMW and the fourth one is a Volkswagen Passat.
The claims could not be corroborated, and neither Xia nor her husband responded publicly.
Public pressure grew to the point that the Agricultural Development Bank of China had to release a statement that said Xia had not received any gifts or money from clients or had leveraged her position to commit other crimes.
Liu, a resident of Zhoukou in central China's Henan province, scoffed at the bank's response.
"Can it pledge to keep on investigating? So many houses, shops and cars are just there. I have not fabricated them," she told the Beijing Youth Daily.
"I hope the disciplinary authority can intervene and investigate, and I am willing to provide all the evidence in my possession."
However, it is plainly obvious that Liu and Xia did not get along, and Liu even admitted she made the allegations out of her "hatred towards the woman" and said she got along "painfully" with Xia before the divorce.
"What is most unacceptable to me is that she made me get down on my knees and clean the floor with a towel. I was told to do this even when I was pregnant.
"I once became seriously ill after being on my knees for a long time," Liu recalled.
Viral revenge video claims ex-mother-in-law was paid despite not working, sparks investigation from Chinese state-owned bank
https://www.msn.com/en-sg/news/worl...tion-from-chinese-state-owned-bank/ar-AARVJHJLiu Yinyue said her mother-in-law received her salary despite never showing up to work and had accumulated assets
The Agricultural Development Bank of China investigated but said it found no evidence of illegal activity
A state-owned bank in China cleared an employee of wrongdoing following an internal investigation after a woman accused her of accumulating assets and receiving a salary despite barely working.
A video post from Liu Yinyue went viral and she accused her former mother-in-law, Xia Xuehua, who works at Agricultural Development Bank of China, of collecting suspicious assets.
The accusations placed Xia and her husband, surnamed Li, who works at Zhongyuan Agricultural Insurance Company, a state-owned insurance firm, under the spotlight. The insurance company told the Beijing Youth Daily that Li is under investigation amid the accusations made in Liu's video.
Liu Yinyue claimed her mother in-law took advantage of the Agricultural Development Bank of China. Photo: Baidu © Provided by South China Morning Post Liu Yinyue claimed her mother in-law took advantage of the Agricultural Development Bank of China. Photo: Baidu
Liu said: "[Xia] did not go to work at all this year, but she still received her salary every month. She has grabbed her share of the state assets."
Liu also claimed Xia, "has eight flats, nine shops and four cars. They only use and wear luxury brands." She added that two of the family's cars are Mercedes-Benz, one is BMW and the fourth one is a Volkswagen Passat.
The claims could not be corroborated, and neither Xia nor her husband responded publicly.
Public pressure grew to the point that the Agricultural Development Bank of China had to release a statement that said Xia had not received any gifts or money from clients or had leveraged her position to commit other crimes.
Liu, a resident of Zhoukou in central China's Henan province, scoffed at the bank's response.
"Can it pledge to keep on investigating? So many houses, shops and cars are just there. I have not fabricated them," she told the Beijing Youth Daily.
"I hope the disciplinary authority can intervene and investigate, and I am willing to provide all the evidence in my possession."
However, it is plainly obvious that Liu and Xia did not get along, and Liu even admitted she made the allegations out of her "hatred towards the woman" and said she got along "painfully" with Xia before the divorce.
"What is most unacceptable to me is that she made me get down on my knees and clean the floor with a towel. I was told to do this even when I was pregnant.
"I once became seriously ill after being on my knees for a long time," Liu recalled.