China Daily (Hong Kong)

Beijing court re-educating young bullies

Pilot program involves series of short courses aimed at changing behavior

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

A Beijing court has been testing a way to educate and correct young bullies, in a move to help them return to school. If the program is successful, it will be expanded to young people who have committed other offenses, it said.

The correction takes the form of training courses organized by the capital’s Tongzhou District People’s Court. The courses began on Monday with 14 girls, 15 to 17 years old, who had been punished for bullying on campus.

One of the participan­ts had been given a suspended prison sentence of a year and 10 months. The court did not release informatio­n about specific offenses because it wanted to protect the minors’ privacy.

It’s the first time a court has tried to educate young offenders through training, although prosecutor­s elsewhere have tried similar approaches. The course will run until Friday.

“Our aim is to show these students who have received criminal or administra­tive punishment­s for bullying the severity of their actions and help change their behavior,” said Wei Dan, chief judge of the court’s No 2 Criminal Tribunal.

The students will receive a series of short courses over the five days, including military training, lectures on the law and psychologi­cal support, Wei said.

“I took the girls to cross a long rope bridge in an ecological garden on Monday. Some brave ones reached out to help those who were fearful, which impressed me,” she said. It was a good opportunit­y to show them how to take care of others and get along, she added.

The students will be given individual psychologi­cal counseling on Wednesday, the court said.

“We hope the girls can open their minds in the courses, realizing the impropriet­y of their earlier behavior and

Schools cannot handle serious bullying incidents. Judicial authoritie­s must step in with aid.”

Tong Lihua,

learning how to communicat­e with others,” Wei said.

She noted that attendance was voluntaril­y, and that the instructor­s would review each student’s performanc­e the week before they can return to school.

“It’s a new exploratio­n in educating young offenders, and we’re planning to conduct such courses regularly,” she said.

Tong Lihua, head of Beijing Children’s Legal Aid and Research Center, applauded the short course format, saying juvenile problems, especially bullying, should be solved by people from all walks of life.

“Schools cannot handle serious bullying incidents. Judicial authoritie­s must step in with aid. But the aid must not focus solely on investigat­ion and trial,” he said. “What the minors need is legal education. Youngsters will easily realize the seriousnes­s of behaviors when they are educated by judges instead of teachers.”

Ruan Chuansheng, a Shanghai criminal lawyer, however, said he prefers the courses to be given by justice bureaus or prosecutor­s.

“After all, courts should focus on case hearings,” he said.

Prosecutor­s in Shanghai’s Jing’an district have done similar tests aimed at helping minors, he said. Judicial workers should be trained before providing courses, he added.

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