Custom counterfeit student cards for universities in Hong Kong sold online

Tailor-made counterfeit student cards for universities in Hong Kong, including the city’s oldest institution, are being sold on an online platform, the Post has found, with legal experts warning that both sellers and buyers may be breaking the law.

A check by the Post on Monday found at least three shops on a major cross-border e-commerce platform, Pinduoduo, selling counterfeit student cards for around 40 to 70 yuan (US$5.60 to US$9.80) each.

Some of the sellers told the Post that the cards were usually for photo-taking purposes, with one claiming that the fake documents would not bear any legal risks.

However, when the Post checked the platform again on Tuesday, all the products were marked as “sold out”.

Lawyer Albert Luk Wai-hung said that even if a shop carried a disclaimer on the post that sold those counterfeit cards, both sellers and buyers could still be committing forgery.

“If buyers use the counterfeit student cards to gain benefits, both they and the sellers are violating the law,” he said.

Anyone convicted of forgery faces a maximum penalty of 14 years’ imprisonment.

Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

Hong Kong’s huge year of IPOs continues, with annual crown all but assured

Hong Kong’s huge year of IPOs continues, with annual crown all but assured

Funds raised from new share sales in Hong Kong jumped 221 per cent in the first nine months of 2025, strengthening the local stock exchange’s grip on the top spot in the global rankings, while analysts predicted that the initial public offering (IPO) market would continue to pop well into next year. A total of

8 injured after Hong Kong coach strikes footbridge, loses front roof section

8 injured after Hong Kong coach strikes footbridge, loses front roof section

At least eight people were injured in Hong Kong after a coach struck a footbridge and had the front of its roof ripped off near the Heung Yuen Wai boundary control point on Tuesday. Police received a report at 12.12pm after the coach ascended an auxiliary road linked to Lin Ma Hang Road in Ta

Hong Kong court convicts Abby Choi’s former mother-in-law for obstructing probe

Hong Kong court convicts Abby Choi’s former mother-in-law for obstructing probe

The former mother-in-law of the slain Hong Kong socialite Abby Choi Tin-fung has been convicted of obstructing a police investigation into her son after the model’s murder came to light two years ago. The District Court on Tuesday found Jenny Li Sui-heung guilty of perverting the course of justice for urging Alex Kwong Kong-chi to

Hong Kong’s extreme weather body tasked with bolstering typhoon response works

Hong Kong’s extreme weather body tasked with bolstering typhoon response works

Hong Kong’s leader has tasked the government’s steering committee on handling extreme weather with improving works and facilities in typhoon-vulnerable areas after the city was brought to a standstill by Super Typhoon Ragasa last week. Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu said on Tuesday that the government had managed to minimise and swiftly recover from the

Chief Executive John Lee says that the implementation of any policies requires thorough consideration. Photo: Elson Li

Hong Kong’s John Lee cites lack of social consensus in shelving waste-charging scheme

A lack of social consensus has led the government to shelve a pay-as-you-throw scheme indefinitely, Hong Kong’s leader has said, while stressing that his administration “will not stop” its commitment to reducing waste. Commenting for the first time on the indefinite suspension of the waste-charging scheme, Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu said on Tuesday that

No country should harbour criminals, Hong Kong leader warns after Nathan Law saga

No country should harbour criminals, Hong Kong leader warns after Nathan Law saga

Hong Kong’s leader has warned that no country should harbour criminals, the day after Singapore cited “national interests” as the reason for denying entry to wanted activist Nathan Law Kwun-chung. But Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu on Tuesday sidestepped a question on whether his administration had asked the city state to help transfer Law, as

Hong Kong welcomes 2 PLA Navy vessels for National Day celebrations

Hong Kong welcomes 2 PLA Navy vessels for National Day celebrations

Onlookers have gathered on both sides of Hong Kong’s Victoria Harbour to welcome two People’s Liberation Army (PLA) naval vessels that sailed into the city’s waters for a four-day port call as part of National Day celebrations. Training vessel Qi Jiguang and amphibious landing ship Yimeng Shan arrived at around 7am on Tuesday via Tathong

Why Hong Kong’s tightened imported labour rules still rankle local workers

Why Hong Kong’s tightened imported labour rules still rankle local workers

Nepali-Hongkonger Gurung has been on the job market for four months and feels he is hitting a dead end. He has been in Hong Kong for more than three decades, but this is his worst stretch of being unemployed, the fifty-something said. After losing his construction job in June this year, Gurung, who uses his