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Monday 15 June 2026 14:54:04 GMT
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In 2003, an eighteen-year-old named Yang Bo broke into a government vault and stole the exam papers for 6.3 million Chinese students. Then he burned every page. At 12:30 a.m. on June 5th, Yang Bo climbed a wall into the Nanbu county education bureau carrying pliers, a pencil knife, and a small screwdriver. The guard was asleep. The deputy director had been playing mahjong since 6 p.m. He traced the infrared alarm wiring to its breaker and cut the power. He bent a steel rebar with pliers until he could slip through. He sliced open six sealed envelopes and took one copy of every 2003 gaokao paper. Chinese, English, math, and comprehensive. Then he walked home and fell asleep on a wooden trunk containing the papers. The next afternoon, he heard teachers whispering about a theft. He sprinted home, read the Chinese essay prompt, and scanned some math problems. Then he burned every page in a metal basin and flushed the ashes down a squat toilet. He did not copy them. He did not sell them. He did not drive to Chengdu where a cram school would have paid life-changing money for that stack. The Ministry of Public Security sent Wu Guoqing, one of China's top forensic investigators, within twelve hours. They classified the case at the highest confidential tier and throttled all phone lines leaving the county. The gaokao went ahead on schedule. Yang Bo sat the exam himself. He scored 515, sixty points above the cutoff. His preference list: two military academies and Southwest Jiaotong University. A farm boy from Mawang township had applied to be a military officer. He stole the most valuable document in Chinese life that summer, and he refused to share it, because sharing it would have destroyed the ranking. And the ranking was the only door a kid from his village had. He got seven years under the state secrets espionage statute. The door was that important.
In 2003, an eighteen-year-old named Yang Bo broke into a government vault and stole the exam papers for 6.3 million Chinese students. Then he burned every page. At 12:30 a.m. on June 5th, Yang Bo climbed a wall into the Nanbu county education bureau carrying pliers, a pencil knife, and a small screwdriver. The guard was asleep. The deputy director had been playing mahjong since 6 p.m. He traced the infrared alarm wiring to its breaker and cut the power. He bent a steel rebar with pliers until he could slip through. He sliced open six sealed envelopes and took one copy of every 2003 gaokao paper. Chinese, English, math, and comprehensive. Then he walked home and fell asleep on a wooden trunk containing the papers. The next afternoon, he heard teachers whispering about a theft. He sprinted home, read the Chinese essay prompt, and scanned some math problems. Then he burned every page in a metal basin and flushed the ashes down a squat toilet. He did not copy them. He did not sell them. He did not drive to Chengdu where a cram school would have paid life-changing money for that stack. The Ministry of Public Security sent Wu Guoqing, one of China's top forensic investigators, within twelve hours. They classified the case at the highest confidential tier and throttled all phone lines leaving the county. The gaokao went ahead on schedule. Yang Bo sat the exam himself. He scored 515, sixty points above the cutoff. His preference list: two military academies and Southwest Jiaotong University. A farm boy from Mawang township had applied to be a military officer. He stole the most valuable document in Chinese life that summer, and he refused to share it, because sharing it would have destroyed the ranking. And the ranking was the only door a kid from his village had. He got seven years under the state secrets espionage statute. The door was that important.

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