The Borneo Post

China travel giant suspends officials after child-abuse scandal

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SHANGHAI: China’s leading online travel agency said yesterday it had suspended two top officials after disturbing video footage of workers abusing toddlers at a company daycare went viral, sparking nationwide outrage.

Clips began to surface last week showing young children of Ctrip employees being roughly handled, and punished by being force- fed what parents claimed was spicy mustard at the company’s Shanghai headquarte­rs.

Shi Qi, a group vice-president, and vice-president Feng Weihua were suspended by Ctrip pending an internal investigat­ion, according to a company letter circulated online.

A Ctrip spokeswoma­n told AFP yesterday that the letter was authentic.

Police last week said they had detained three daycare staff for suspected abuse.

The company said the daycare centre has since been shut.

Ctrip is China’s biggest online booking site for air, rail and other travel. It bought British flight search app Skyscanner for US$ 1.7 billion last year.

After the video of the abuse went viral, subsequent clips emerged showing irate parents trying to take revenge by forcing what appeared to be spicy mustard into the mouth of one of the accused female staff members, as police sought to hold them back.

Another clip showed the same woman on her knees, bowing and apologisin­g profusely for her ‘errors’.

Ctrip had outsourced daily operations of the daycare centre to Shanghai Women, part of a nationwide organisati­on that aims to protect women’s rights in China.

“It is hard to imagine that we are coding upstairs and you are abusing our babies downstairs,” wrote one man on Weibo, China’s equivalent of Twitter, claiming to be the father of a child that attended the daycare.

He added that it had been very hard to get his child admitted to the daycare, which has a waiting list.

About 100 children, all aged below three, attended the daycare centre in the past three months, Ctrip said. — AFP

 ??  ?? A woman walks past the closed Ctrip day-care centre in Shanghai. — AFP photo
A woman walks past the closed Ctrip day-care centre in Shanghai. — AFP photo

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