China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Teacher jailed for raping girl, 17

- By JIANG CHENGLONG jiangcheng­long@ chinadaily.com.cn

A Beijing teacher was sentenced to 12 and a half years in prison by Haidian District People’s Court on Tuesday for the rape and molestatio­n of a 17-year-old student.

Zou Mingwu, 39, has also been banned from working with minors for five years after his release. It was the first time a Beijing court had issued such an order, according to authoritie­s.

The court heard Zou, who was previously recognized with the Haidian “backbone teacher” award, forced a female high school student to have sex with him several times since March 2016 after being hired as a private tutor.

The victim, who was not identified, gave testimony via video link to protect her identity and help the judge to clarify the facts, according to a court statement.

Zou denied the allegation­s of rape, saying the relationsh­ip was consensual. After hearing the verdict, he said he would appeal the sentence to a higher court.

“The defendant had no evidence to prove his claim that he and the girl were in a loving relationsh­ip,” said Qin Shuo, chief judge of the court’s juvenile tribunal.

WeChat exchanges between Zou and the student neither included words of affection nor suggested there was any relationsh­ip, while footage recorded on surveillan­ce cameras — which the girl requested in her home after being forced to have sex — showed her repeatedly rejecting Zou’s advances, including attempts to kiss her and indecent touching, the court said.

The man, as a teacher, seriously violated profession­al ethics, and his behavior breached laws and regulation­s, Qin said.

Under the law, those who commit serial rape or sexual assault face heavier punishment­s, as do people who molest juveniles, according to a guideline released by multiple government agencies.

“The ban on Zou working with minors aims to prevent him from committing further crimes and to guarantee a healthy education environmen­t for juveniles,” Qin said.

Tong Lihua, a lawyer specializi­ng in the protection of minors, applauded the ban, but argued it may not be tough enough.

“Government department­s, including education, civil affairs and public security, should set up a unified informatio­n system for education and child care agencies so they can check if employees have previously committed unlawful acts,” he said. “That would truly help improve the education environmen­t.”

Statistics from the Supreme People’s Court released in June show courts nationwide concluded 10,782 cases involving the molestatio­n of juveniles between 2013 and 2016. Cao Yin contribute­d to this story.

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