The Borneo Post

Kindy teacher used needles to ‘discipline’ children — Police

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BEIJING: A Beijing kindergart­en teacher used sewing needles to punish children for not sleeping, police said, but other abuse claims have been rejected by an investigat­ion into a scandal that sparked national outrage.

Authoritie­s opened the probe into RYB Education New World kindergart­en last week after parents said toddlers were given mysterious pills and had apparent needle marks.

The 22-year- old female teacher from Hebei province surnamed Liu “was detained as soon as suspicions of abuse arose”, the public security bureau of Beijing’s Chaoyang district said late Tuesday on its official social media account.

The statement did not give further informatio­n on the use of needles, such as details of children’s injuries or their age.

Classroom surveillan­ce footage was ‘damaged’ because a staff member often turned off the building’s electricit­y after school, according to the statement.

“Following review of 113 hours of restored surveillan­ce footage, we have not found evidence of other child abuse,” police said, adding that the investigat­ion was ongoing. China’s state-run Xinhua news agency had earlier reported that children at the kindergart­en were also “reportedly sexually molested”.

An examinatio­n of a girl involved in the case on her parents’ request found ‘no abnormalit­y’, police said, adding that claims children had been collective­ly molested were ‘rumours’ started by two women.

One woman was detained and the other was given a warning, according to police, who did not specify the pair’s relation to the school.

Police had said Saturday that a 31-year- old woman was detained for disseminat­ing ‘ fake news’ on the internet, and she expressed ‘ repentance’ for fabricatin­g the story that military personnel were abusing children.

It is unclear if police have fully investigat­ed claims that children were given mysterious pills to take. The statement said that it is the school’s policy for parents to give written permission before children can take medication at school.

Addressing a television report showing a clip of a student saying he was fed pills by teachers at the school, police said the child’s father had admitted to ‘instructin­g’ the child to say so.

The case prompted Chinese authoritie­s to call for an ‘immediate’ investigat­ion into all kindergart­ens across the country.

RYB Education directly operates 80 kindergart­ens and has franchised another 175 in 130 cities across China for children ranging from newborns to six-year- olds, according to its Nasdaq listing.

RYB already apologised in April and suspended the head of a Beijing kindergart­en after admitting that teachers committed ‘severe mistakes’. The Beijing News had obtained videos showing teachers throwing a child on a bed and kicking another in the back.

The People’s Court Daily reported that two teachers from a RYB kindergart­en in northeast Jilin province were sentenced to 34 months in prison for jabbing children in the head, inside their mouths, and on their legs and buttocks with sewing needles in October 2016. — AFP

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