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Chapter 654 , International News

After returning from Nagoya to book books, Lin Yi started to organize and sort out the books he had bought, packing them. Haitang had already contacted Japan Airlines and would use an airplane to ship them back to China.

But good things get worse.

Just when Lin Yi thought everything was OK, bad news came. During the inspection, Japan Airlines classified Lin Yi's book consigned as "national treasures" and "cultural relics" and prohibited from being exported.

Lin Yi couldn't help but feel funny. These were all used books he bought, but unexpectedly they were stuck on the airline's cargo inspection.

Of course, Lin Yi also understands some international laws and regulations, and knows that national treasures and cultural relics of any country cannot be easily exported. But the problem is that most of the so-called "national treasures" in Japan are from ancient Chinese books and were taken away when Japan invaded China.

Lin Yi and Haitang immediately wrote an appeal and asked Japan Airlines to release the case. However, they ignored it and sent a summons to Lin Yi for prosecuting him for smuggling Japanese cultural relics.

Dizzy.

This is the first time Lin Yi has learned about the unreasonable troubles of little Japan.

OK, since I want to play, I will play with you all the way.

So Lin Yi contacted Mie Ashikaga and asked her to be a witness, on the one hand, to prove that the so-called Japanese national treasures were actually collected by her grandfather from China and other places. On the other hand, Lin Yi hired a famous Japanese lawyer to prepare for a big lawsuit with JAL.

Originally, this incident was just between Lin Yi and JAL. I don’t know who leaked the news. Coupled with Lin Yi’s reputation as a famous collector in China and the blessing of Ashikaga Miei Mythology Co., Ltd., the entire incident became a sensitive topic that was paid attention to in Japan and even China.

Whether those ancient books were Japanese national treasures or Chinese national treasures has caused huge controversy among the people of China and Japan.

A small matter that originally had a broken shipping instantly rose to the historical issues left over from countries.

As the male protagonist of the whole thing, Lin Yi unexpectedly entered the public eye again, and this time it was international.

...

"Have you ever seen Jackie Chan's "The Twelve Zodiacs"? Any country takes other people's things as its own and says they are their own treasures, and they are all robbers!"

"Those batch of ancient books are originally from our China, and we firmly support Lin Yi to transport them back!"

"China is strong and I'm afraid of a bird. At worst, I can send a special plane to transport the books back to see what those Japanese dare to do!"

These are all the voices of some radicals on the Internet.

...

"According to international law, the return of cultural relics and ancient books also requires personal interests. Now Lin Yi has bought the books, which belongs to him. He wants to transport them back to China, and Japan has no power to interfere."

"The embargo of cultural relics is a law in every country, but it depends first on who the group of cultural relics belongs to. It is obvious that Lin Yi bought the ancient books now from Japan for money, so he owns the ownership of these books. From a legal perspective, Japan has no reason to stop them unless they can prove that these ancient books belong to Japan."

"Having a book purchase invoice, a book purchase agreement and contract is enough to prove that Lin Yi is the owner of this batch of books; now the Japanese card is not consigned here, it is nothing more than finding excuses to seize these ancient books that originally belonged to China. What we have to do now is to fully support Lin Yi and wait for a fair legal judgment."

These are some of the more gentle and calm voices on the Internet.

At the same time, the Japanese side also disclosed the true faces of the ancient books they seized on the Internet and in newspapers. Among them, the precious and valuable Song and Yuan engravings made some ancient books in China, Japan and even the world dumbfounded.

Some ancient book collectors who knew Lin Yi understood this moment. If Lin Yi could really transport this batch of ancient books back to China from Japan this time, let alone how much contribution he made to the country, let domestic collectors exclaim, just say that the number of Song and Yuan engravings is enough to exceed any museum in China. In other words, Lin Yi will become the well-deserved first person with the largest collection of Song and Yuan engravings in China and even abroad!

Especially the photos posted online are almost all scanned, which makes some ancient book lovers excited.

In particular, some Japanese collectors even wrote a letter to the Japanese government, resolutely protecting these "national treasures" and never allow Lin Yi to bring them back.

The same is true in China. Both collectors and netizens were shocked by these ancient treasures of their own nation, and wrote a letter to the country to strongly ask for help from Lin Yi bring back this batch of national treasures.

So things got bigger and bigger.

From online to international.

The people of China and Japan started war with each other, shouted and killed each other online, and condemned each other for being despicable and shameless; citing various examples to prove that the batch of ancient books belongs to their own country.

According to the ancient books belonging to the Chinese Song and Yuan dynasties, the Chinese people said that these are treasures passed down by our ancestors, and of course they should be from China.

Japanese people say that the Chinese cannot protect their treasures and can blame anyone. They have the ability to go to the British Museum in the UK in advance to take back the cultural relics they snatched away back.

Chinese people say that these books were purchased by Lin Yi from the Japanese for money and had invoice contracts. Are Japanese illiterate?

Japanese people also said that when selling, they did not pay attention to the fact that those were Japanese national treasures, so the transaction was invalid and the contract was invalid. At most, they could lose money to the person named Lin.

...

The two sides just went back and forth, and no one allowed anyone to let the people of the two countries open up a war of verbal war.

At the same time, the Japanese lawyer hired by Lin Yihua at a high price also officially began to appeal, countering the anti-accusation that Japan Airlines "detained the customer's cargo without sufficient reason", and then listed countless proof conditions later---

However, Japan Airlines was not a soft spot. They also hired a national-level lawyer to fight against Lin Yi's lawyer.

In this way, the war that originally broke out between the Chinese and Japanese people and the Internet was officially staged in the Japanese courts.

For this reason, major Japanese TV stations actually regarded this matter as a huge news and filmed staff for live broadcast; and the media in China were not showing weakness. Several TV stations with strong capabilities such as Phoenix TV also went to Japan collectively and recorded the verbal battles in court with the media.

The matter is getting big, let alone China and Japan, it has caused the US Sky TV, British BBC TV, France and Germany to report on this matter.
Chapter completed!
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