Kuwait Times

Noble son or killer? Chinese court case prompts debate

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A virtuous son or a vigilante murderer: The case of a man who killed a debt collector in defense of his mother has sparked heated debate in China, as an appeal court decides whether to uphold his life sentence. Social media erupted after 22-year-old Yu Huan was convicted for stabbing to death a man who had beaten and humiliated his parent. In a country where law enforcemen­t is weak and frequently seen as corrupt, some web users saw his actions as a proportion­ate and justified response when police failed to step in. Others have insisted that “the law is the law” and Yu should serve his full term. The public fury has reached such a fever pitch that the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate, China’s highest investigat­ion agency, has opened a rare probe into the incident.

‘Don’t use your fists’

Court documents reveal that Yu Huan’s mother, Su Yinxia had borrowed more than one million yuan ($145,000) for her auto parts manufactur­ing company from a local real estate developer. Little by little, she told police, she had paid him back 1.5 million yuan. But the ten percent monthly interest payments kept piling up, making it difficult for her to get out from under her debt. The developer, Wu Xuezhan-who has reportedly been detained by police for connection­s to organized crime-sent a gang of loan collectors to Su’s factory in April 2015, where, Su says, they began yelling at her and her son. Yu says a man named Du Zhihao then exposed himself.

A police officer arrived on the scene a short time later, witnesses claim, but rather than stepping in to stop the abuse, he issued a mild warning: “If you’re here to settle debts don’t fight, don’t use your fistsjust talk it out.” After the officer left, a fracas erupted. Su insists the debt collectors started the violence. But Yu finished it, pulling out a fruit knife and stabbing four of the men, including Du, who died from blood loss. The debt collectors deny Su and Yu’s claims that they had hit and humiliated them. Yu was convicted of intentiona­lly causing harm that resulted in death, and sentenced to life. Wu has since been arrested for gang-related activities, according to local media.

‘What is the law for?’

Much of the discussion on social media has centered on whether the country’s rule of law has deteriorat­ed to the extent that children need to step in to protect their parents when authoritie­s fail to help. “If the law doesn’t bring justice to this kind of person, what is the law for, anyway?” asked one user on the Weibo social network. “If anyone dared do that to my mom, I’d kill them right away,” wrote another. It is a sticky issue for the government, which has strongly promoted filial piety-even passing laws requiring children to visit their parents-as part of a nation-wide push to promote traditiona­l values.

In an unusual critique of law enforcemen­t, the nationalis­tic Global Times on Sunday called for Yu to receive a fair sentence. “We welcome the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate’s probe into whether Yu was legitimate­ly acting in self-defense and whether the police officers’ behavior can be considered a derelictio­n of duty,” the column said. Yu’s lawyer, Yin Qingli said he was hopeful his client would be shown leniency by the Shandong Higher People’s Court when it hears the appeal. “Under the present circumstan­ces, I believe there is a very high chance that Yu Huan’s sentence will be changed,”Yin said.— AFP

 ??  ?? CHINA: This undated handout picture released by the family of Yu Huan, shows Yu Huan at an unknown location. — AFP
CHINA: This undated handout picture released by the family of Yu Huan, shows Yu Huan at an unknown location. — AFP

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