BEIJING: A farmer in northern China
found guilty of doctoring photos of an endangered tiger after collecting a cash
reward from wildlife authorities, has been handed a lighter sentence on appeal,
local media said on Tuesday.
Zhou Zhenglong, a 54-year-old farmer
from a mountainous county in northern Shaanxi province, was awarded a 20,000
yuan bonus last year, after he produced pictures which authorities said were
evidence of a South China tiger.
The pictures, which showed a tiger
crouching in a forest setting, sparked an Internet furor led by experts who
identified the photos as faked, and local media who accused officials of
endorsing them as a means of promoting tourism in a poor
region.
After months of dithering, authorities finally admitted the
pictures were fake and sacked a swag of officials for their part in the
scandal.
Zhou, who had been given a jail term for fraud and illegally
possessing bullets in September, had the sentence suspended at his appeal,
Xinhua news agency said, citing the Intermediate People's Court in Ankang,
Shaanxi.
The court took note of the defendant's admission of guilt
and "obvious regret" and gave Zhou a three-year reprieve, but a 2,000 yuan fine
and an order to give back the cash reward were upheld, the Beijing News said in
a separate report.
Authorities bore guilt for enabling the fraud
through the "cursory release of the news by relevant departments," Xinhua quoted
Zhou's lawyers as saying outside the court.
China has been rocked by
a number of scandals involving official endorsement of faked
photos.
In February, the chief editor of a Chinese newspaper quit
after one of its photographers faked a prize-winning photo of endangered Tibetan
antelopes appearing unfazed by a passing train on the Qinghai-Tibet
railway.