Recently, immigration management police at the Urumqi Border Inspection Station, which falls under the Xinjiang Border Inspection General Station, detected two foreign nationals attempting to leave China for Canada with forged documents.
One of them, individual A, had a counterfeit full – page Canadian visa attached to his passport. The other, individual B, was using a passport with an altered personal information page and possessed five full – page counterfeit visas from various countries. Both individuals were caught red – handed by immigration police during the border clearance process.
These two young men, both born after 2000, tried to assert their “innocence” by stating that they were not aware of the forged visas. Despite having multiple fake visas, they claimed to travel internationally frequently and even mentioned family connections, arguing that they had “contacts” in their destination country.
When faced with irrefutable evidence, the two resorted to dodging tactics – minimizing the issue, feigning ignorance, and pretending not to comprehend.
In response to such absurd conduct, the border inspection station, in line with the Exit and Entry Administration Law of the People’s Republic of China, imposed an administrative fine of 1,000 yuan on individual A and ordered his deportation. Individual B was fined 3,000 yuan, had the forged documents confiscated, and was also deported.