Dilraba Dilmurat Takes Legal Action Over Online Infringement, Court Date Set

Dilraba Takes Legal Action Over Online Infringement, Court Date Set
Image: Tianyancha/Weibo

Looks like things are heating up off-screen for Dilraba Dilmurat. 

The Chinese superstar is officially taking legal action against someone surnamed Feng over alleged online infringement—and the case is heading to court next month.

According to a notice published on 6 May via the Tianyancha app, the Beijing Internet Court has formally issued a lawsuit notice and court summons to the defendant, Feng. 

Dilraba Sues Netizen for Online Slander – Case Goes Public Next Month
Dilraba Sues Netizen for Online Slander – Case Goes Public Next Month (Tianyancha)

Tianyancha – Court Notice Details
Publication Date: 6 May 2025
Publication Platform: Electronic Notice
Plaintiff: Dilraba Dilmurat
Defendant: (Surname) Feng
Type of Notice: Copy of complaint and court summons
Court: Beijing Internet Court

Court Notice Content: 

To Feng:
This court has accepted case no. (2025) Jing 0491 Minchu 4397, a dispute concerning online infringement liability between Dilraba and yourself. In accordance with legal procedure, we are hereby issuing this public notice to serve you with a copy of the complaint, supporting evidence, notice of response, evidence submission notice, anti-corruption supervision card, court summons, and other relevant legal materials.

Thirty days after this public notice is issued, it shall be considered as officially delivered. You are required to submit your statement of defence and evidence within 15 days after the delivery period ends.

The case is scheduled to be publicly heard on 23 June 2025 at 9:30 AM in this court’s online courtroom. You must log into the court's electronic litigation platform (website: www.bjinternetcourt.gov.cn), register and link the case, and prepare according to the online hearing requirements. Alternatively, you may appear in court in person to respond and attend the trial.

Failure to attend within the stated time will result in the court proceeding with a judgment by default in accordance with the law.

**

The notice includes all the usual paperwork—copy of the complaint, evidence files, court hearing notice, and more. 

And here's the twist: the court is delivering these materials publicly via announcement. 

Why? 

Because Feng couldn’t be reached directly. 

Under Chinese legal procedure, this method counts as an official delivery after 30 days.

So, mark your calendars: the hearing is scheduled to be held publicly on 23 June at 9:30am. 

The session will take place on the court’s online platform, and if Feng doesn’t show up or respond in time, the court may proceed with a default judgment.

This move by Dilraba is part of a broader trend among celebs taking a stand against malicious online behaviour. 

While the exact nature of the infringement hasn't been detailed publicly, it's clear she's had enough—and is ready to fight back through legal means.

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