According to Beijing Daily, the Forbidden City has been robbed and 7 Hong Kong private collections lost early on 8th May 2011.

2011 Forbidden city robbed

Armed Policed stand behind security line on 10th May 2011.

 

Forbidden city robbed 2011

A work of Forbidden City notify visitors don't get closer.

Beijing Forbidden City Administration Office and Beijing Police Bureau have confirmed the authenticity on 9th May 2011.

Rumor says the theft dug a hole on the wall of the Hall of Abstinence and took 7 private collections. Public media focus on how the theft break through the so-called 4 level security system which consists of 240 armed policemen, 1600 burglar alarms 3700 smoke sensors and dozens of German shepherds on his own.

China Daily's report 6 minutes later

Police are hunting a thief who stole millions of dollars worth of art in an overnight heist at the famed Palace Museum in Beijing.

The suspect, who was caught on security cameras, is believed to have hidden inside China's biggest museum before closing on May 8, and carried out the burglary before midnight.

Rumor of the art heist inside the heavily fortified Forbidden City Palace began to hit China's cyber world Tuesday. A blogger claimed the theft amounted to nearly one billion yuan ($154 million).

The museum confirmed the theft Tuesday afternoon on its microblog, but did not confirm the value of seven stolen items which were borrowed from a Hong Kong museum for the exhibition in the capital.

"They (the stolen items) are private collections, basically gold and silver powder boxes decorated by gems of various kinds," said Wang Xiahong, curator of the Hong Kong-based Liangyi Museum.

"Not as much as 1 billion yuan, but tens of millions to say the least." she adds.

Organizers say the exhibition will continue till June 27 as scheduled after a discussion with the collector of the missing items. The Palace Museum will hold a news conference today to release photos of stolen pieces which may be on sale on the black-market.

Exhibition halls, including the site of the theft in the east zone of the museum, have been closed to tourists since Tuesday noon, with the authorities not giving a clear date of when they will reopen.