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Former head of China’s ‘kung fu’ temple sentenced to 24 years, state media reports

By Thomson Reuters May 29, 2026 | 7:04 AM

BEIJING, May 29 (Reuters) – The former abbot of a Chinese temple famed as the birthplace of kung fu has been ​sentenced to 24 years in prison ‌and fined 3.5 million yuan ($517,000) for crimes including embezzlement and bribery, state media reported on Friday.

Buddhist monk Shi Yongxin, 60, was charged in March this year ‌after ​being placed under investigation last ⁠July.

A court in the ⁠central Chinese province of Henan handed down the sentence, saying Shi had abused his role at Shaolin Temple to embezzle, misappropriate, ​and take and give bribes totaling about 300 million yuan over nearly three decades.

Shi ⁠pleaded guilty and told the ⁠court he would not appeal, ​state media reported.

Shaolin Temple said last July that ​its head monk was under joint investigation by ‌multiple agencies for suspected criminal offences including embezzlement and violation of Buddhist precepts by maintaining improper relationships with multiple women over a ⁠long period.

Shi’s monastic certificate was swiftly revoked by the Buddhist Association of China amid the investigation. Responding ⁠to Shi’s ‌sentencing in a statement, the ⁠association said on Friday that “he brought ​it ‌on himself”.

Shi, known as Liu Yingcheng ​before he ⁠became a monk in 1981, oversaw the temple since 1987 and became its abbot in 1999.

($1 = 6.7665 Chinese yuan renminbi)

(Reporting by Shi Bu and Liz Lee; Editing by Tomasz Janowski and ​Helen Popper)