REUTERS - Authorities in  China's southwestern city of Kunming have identified another 22  unauthorised Apple retailers weeks after a fake of the company's store  in the city sparked an international storm.
    China's Administration for Industry and Commerce in the Yunnan  provincial capital said the stores have been ordered to stop using  Apple's logo after Apple China accused them of unfair competition and  violating its registered trademark, state media said on Thursday.
    The market watchdog agency said  it would set up a complaint hotline and boost monitoring, the official  Xinhua news agency reported.
    It did not say if the shops were selling knock-off Apple products or genuine but smuggled models.
    Countless unauthorised resellers of Apple and other brands' electronic products throughout China sell the real thing but buy their goods overseas and smuggle them into the country to escape taxes.
    In July, inspections of around 300 shops in Kunming were carried  out after a blog post by an American living in the city exposed a  near-flawless fake Apple Store where even the staff were convinced they  were working for the California-based iPhone and iPad maker.
    Chinese law protects trademarks and prohibits companies from copying the "look and feel" of other companies' stores.
    But enforcement is spotty, and the United States and other  Western countries have often complained China is woefully behind in its  effort to stamp out intellectual property (IP) theft.
    In May, China was listed for  the seventh year by the U.S. Trade Representative's office as a country  with one of the worst records for preventing copyright theft.
 (Reporting by Michael Martina; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)
