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He sent photos of some of the evidence collected at the deposition, to the state-controlled Chinese newspaper Huashang Bao, under the title 'Latest detailed proof of Shi Yongxin's adultery'. In the document, collected by Zhenzhou Police Bureau, Liu Liming said she and Shi Yongxin had sex in hotels across China up to 20 times after first meeting three years previously. The record, translated from its original form by MailOnline, also says during that time she fell pregnant, but had a termination. Liu Liming denied trying to blackmail the abbot by hanging onto her soiled pink panties. She said in the deposition: 'The answer is I just wanted to use these things to prove the sexual relationship between me and Shi Yongxin, to prevent him denying it. I didn't have another purpose.' Shi Zhengyi admitted meeting Liu Liming, the papers show, after she contacted him asking if she could set up a branch of the Shaolin Monastery in the city of Shenzhen, but said their relationship was strictly professional. The case was settled, with Shi Yongxin paying her three million Yuan (£104,000) as compensation. The real identity of 'Shi Zhengyi' is not known. reported that the Defeng city government said they had no records of anyone with that name - which roughly translates as 'justice' - and he 'doesn't exist'. He has said he wanted to to force a government investigation into Shi Yongxin, saying in a statement to the New York Times: 'We want the outside world to know that the Shaolin abbot, using Buddhism as a cloak, is a maniacal womanizer and corrupt 'tiger' who brazenly exploits Shaolin's assets and tarnishes its reputation.' As well as claiming Shi Yongxin owns a range of swanky cars and has stolen millions from temple's commercial arm, 'Shi Zhengyi' has shared pictures of a Shaolin nun and her baby who the monk is alleged to have fathered. Monastery officials have denied the allegations against the monk, who has committed himself to a life of celibacy, poverty and upholding moral values. The 50-year-old has been at the forefront of the transformation of Shaolin Temple, which dates back 1,500 years and is the birthplace of kung fu and Zen Buddhism. Over the centuries it has been destroyed and rebuilt many times over, after being raided by bandits in the 14th century, sacked in the 17th by rebel forces and razed to the ground in the 18th by the ruling Qing dynasty.
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