2008-06-29 01:57:14 GMT 2008-06-29 09:57:14 (Beijing Time) Xinhua English

A policeman displays the materials about the fake photo of "South China Tiger" at a news conference in Xi'an, capital of northwest China's Shaanxi Province, June 29, 2008. The controversial photographs of South China Tiger in the wild taken by farmer Zhou Zhenglong were confirmed fake ones, according to sources at a press conference of the Shaanxi Provincial government on Sunday.

The undated file photo showing a "South China Tiger" is confirmed a fake one. The controversial photographs of South China Tiger in the wild taken by farmer Zhou Zhenglong were confirmed fake ones, according to sources at a press conference of the Shaanxi Provincial government on Sunday.(Xinhua Photo)
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XI'AN, June 29 (Xinhua) -- The controversial south China tiger photographs by farmer Zhou Zhenglong were fake, according to sources at a press conference of the Shaanxi Provincial government on Sunday.
Zhou, a 53-year-old from the Zhenping county of Shaanxi who claimed to have photographed the tiger with a digital camera on the afternoon of Oct. 3 last year, was suspected of grift and arrested.
His tiger photos, first published on Oct. 12, had been used by the Provincial Forestry Department as proof that the rare tiger still existed in the wild at a press conference. The department awarded Zhou a 20,000 yuan (2,915 U.S. dollars) reward.
But Internet users accused Zhou of making the tiger images with digital software, and local authorities of approving the photos to bolster tourism.