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A man in China who tried to sneak out of the country to find illegal work abroad was so scared about the potential dangers ahead that he carried a copy of Sun Tzu’s Art of War with him for survival tips. Photo: SCMP composite/Weibo/Wikipedia

China man, fearing forced labour, carries Sun Tzu’s Art of War for survival tips while seeking work in Southeast Asia

  • Man arrested trying to sneak across border, hopes for good job abroad
  • Has no idea which country, what job, thinks will earn US$3,000 a month

A man from China who was trying to work illegally in Southeast Asia feared being kidnapped and coerced into forced labour so much that he carried a copy of Sun Tzu’s Art of War with him.

The man, surnamed Luo, travelled to Dongxing city in Guangxi province, southern China, on the border with Vietnam. His plan was to sneak across and find work.

Luo travelled with two other men who had the same intention, and two smugglers.

They were caught by police on March 18, The Paper reported.

A video shows the group of men having dinner at restaurant before being taken to the police station. On checking Luo’s bag, officers found a copy of Sun Tzu’s Art of War.

When police stopped Luo before crossing the border they discovered Sun Tzu’s famous book on him. Photo: thepaper.cn

The book was written by the ancient Chinese military strategist in the late Spring and Autumn Period (770-481 BC), is one of the most influential treatises on warfare strategy in history.

“Why did you take this book with you?” an officer asks Luo in the video.

Handcuffed and crouched on the floor, he answers that he had watched many videos on Douyin that gave detailed interpretations of the book, and thought that would be of help to him in Southeast Asia.

“I bought a copy to see whether I can learn something from it,” Luo told the officer, adding: “After all, it’s dangerous overseas.”

“I only know that my monthly salary will range from 10,000 to 20,000 yuan (US$1,400 - US$2,800), but I have no idea what the job or what its responsibilities will be,” he said.

Luo and the other two men were fined, while the smugglers were detained and charged with criminal offences.

The story has sparked a discussion on mainland social media.

“He believes the book will protect him and save him from being tortured,” said one online observer.

“Ha ha, he must have misread the great book and its wisdom,” another said.

Luo said he had no idea what job he was going to get, or in which Southeast Asian country he would find employment. Photo: thepaper.cn

In recent years, Chinese nationals have found themselves tricked into forced labour in Southeast Asia. Usually when scammers post a fake opportunity to work for high salaries and then kidnap the person.

Aside from being forced to work for shady companies, they are often tortured, sexually assaulted and even threatened with organ harvesting.

In December last year, a 26-year-old man in central China was rescued after three years of torture overseas. He had been forced into a life of crime after buying a cheap holiday package from a gang.

In February 2022, a Chinese man was smuggled to the Cambodian coastal city of Sihanoukville by a criminal gang and later forced to work for telemarketing fraud racketeers.

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