Photo: Woman kills herself after husband’s ‘death’

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A man in China whose wife killed herself and their two children after he allegedly faked his own death for an insurance payout has surrendered to police.

The 34-year-old was presumed dead after his car was found in a river, though his body was never recovered.

He did not tell his wife his alleged plan and she believed he had died.

She later jumped into a pond with their children after posting a suicide note online.

The man, who police said was surnamed He, turned himself into police in Xinhua county in Hunan province last Friday.

He has been detained on charges of insurance fraud and intentional damage to property, Xinhua police said in a statement on WeChat – a social media platform.

The man's alleged plan to claim an insurance payout went tragically wrong

In early September Mr He bought an insurance plan worth one million yuan (£110,000; $145,000) without his wife’s knowledge, police said.

According to a report by state-run Voice of China radio, his wife was named as the beneficiary.

On 19 September, Mr He used a borrowed vehicle to fake his own death in a car crash, police said. He was found to have loans of more than 100,000 yuan.

On 11 October, the bodies of his 31-year-old wife, their four-year-old son and three-year-old daughter were found in a pond near their home, according to the Voice of China.

In a suicide note posted on WeChat, she wrote that she was coming to “accompany” him, adding that she had “only ever wanted our family of four to be together”, the Voice of China added.

Mr He turned himself over to police the next day.

He had earlier posted a video online, which was later widely circulated, in which he was crying and saying he had borrowed money to pay for treatment for his three-year-old daughter, who suffered from epilepsy.

The incident has been widely talked about across Chinese social media over the past week, sparking conversations about financial pressures and familial issues.

The hashtag #ManFakesDeathLeadingtoWifesDeath been viewed almost 29 million times on microblogging-site Weibo.