China Daily (Hong Kong)

Father gets death for slaying doctor

- By ZHANG YAN zhangyan1@chinadaily.com.cn

A father from Shandong province whose newborn daughter died in a hospital has been sentenced to death for killing the doctor who treated her.

Chen Jianli, 30, was convicted of the intentiona­l homicide of pediatrici­an Li Baohua at Laiwu Intermedia­te People’s Court.

“He stabbed the doctor to vent his anger in a public place and used cruel means to kill innocent medical personnel, resulting in great harm to people’s personal safety and a negative social impact. We have given him the death penalty,” the court said in a statement on Sunday.

The killer has also been deprived of his political rights, it added.

Chen’s daughter was born in a hospital in Laiwu in February 2016. The baby developed a fever the next day and was transferre­d to the pediatric ward for treatment, but she died, the court said.

Prosecutor­s said the father blamed Li and the hospital for the death, and he sought compensati­on from both on numerous occasions. When he failed, he decided to get revenge, the court said.

One morning in October 2016, Chen rode a motorcycle to the hospital. On the way he stopped to buy a machete, which he hid in his green canvas bag. Once at the hospital, he went directly to the pediatric ward on the fifth floor and found Li in a break room.

He questioned Li about his daughter’s death and the compensati­on issue. When the doctor did not reply, Chen took out the machete and struck Li in the head as the doctor was answering a phone call.

Li died at the scene, and Chen was detained by police in the hospital.

In recent days, a number of violent attacks on doctors have occurred across the country, attracting attention from the public and media.

Judicial authoritie­s say they have ramped up efforts to punish assailants and have taken a zero-tolerance attitude toward such crimes.

Last week, the Supreme People’s Court held a meeting about judicial reform in which it was decided that people who violently target medical personnel, or who are involved in activities that endanger food or drug safety, will be severely punished.

“In China, lots of patients face difficulti­es in seeing doctors and paying medical fees,” said Li Wei, a lawyer with the Beijing Lawyers Associatio­n. “Patients and doctors don’t have enough trust in each other, which contribute­s to the high incidence of violence targeting medical personnel.

“Authoritie­s should adopt comprehens­ive measures and take the time needed to solve the problem thoroughly,” she said.

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