Los Angeles Times

Child abuse case stirs ire in China

Kindergart­en teachers suspended, accused of drugging and sexually assaulting students.

- By Jonathan Kaiman

BEIJING — Several parents have accused a Beijing kindergart­en of drugging and sexually abusing their children, causing an upswell of anger on Chinese social media and prompting an investigat­ion into abuse at kindergart­ens nationwide.

Children at a school run by the Beijing-based, New York-listed RYB Education New World company reported teachers injecting them with an unidentifi­ed substance, making them swallow white pills and forcing them to strip naked, the parents told Chinese media.

Police and education officials have not confirmed the allegation­s. But Chinese internet users have responded with unmitigate­d rage, their conviction of the allegation­s’ veracity compounded by a recent string of similar cases at Chinese kindergart­ens, including three this month.

“Many of us thought we’d cast off the era of barbarism, only to realize there was no way to escape,” wrote one user on WeChat, China’s most popular chat app, before listing several recent abuse scandals.

Parents of the RYB Education branch in eastern Beijing said they found needle wounds on their children’s thighs, arms and buttocks. One parent said her child told her of a naked adult man, or men — she referred to them as “uncle doctor” and “grandpa doctor” — performing a “health check” on a naked child. Another told reporters that teachers threatened her child about reporting the abuse, warning that they had a “very long telescope” and could watch children from afar, even in their homes.

In one video posted online, a father sits on a bathroom toilet seat, cradling his child in his lap. He asks the child about white pills he reportedly took in school. The child says they put him to sleep.

“The teacher gives it to us — we have to take it every day,” he says. “It tastes like white.”

On Friday, police said a medical examinatio­n confirmed that the children were pricked by needles.

The allegation­s fit a pattern of abuse at Chinese kindergart­ens and child care centers, much of it documented on school surveillan­ce cameras and leaked online. This week, one such video showed a kindergart­en teacher in southeast China’s Zhejiang province slapping a little girl in front of her classmates and dragging a little boy by his neck.

In early November, leaked surveillan­ce video showed a staff member at a Shanghai child care center pushing a little girl, causing her to topple backward and hit her head against a desk. Another video, taken at the same school, showed a child sobbing while eating a substance that parents later said was wasabi.

Also in early November, teachers at a “digital detox” camp in southeast China — an institutio­n intended to cure children of online game addiction — were accused of whipping teenagers with steel cables and locking them in windowless cells.

Last year, police detained two teachers, also in southeast China, over accusation­s that they punished at least one child by jabbing him with needles. The State Council, China’s Cabinet, announced a national investigat­ion into kindergart­ens Friday “to decrease the number of such incidents.”

“These incidents reflect a phenomenon in which several kindergart­ens are managed poorly, systems haven’t been implemente­d and enforcemen­t hasn’t been successful,” the announceme­nt said.

RYB Education (the initials stand for “red, yellow, blue”) went public on the New York Stock Exchange in late September, and has a market capitaliza­tion of $766 million. The 19-year-old company’s website — which depicts happy children running beneath cartoon hotair balloons — calls it China’s largest early-childhood education service provider, with branches in more than 300 Chinese cities and 300,000 students enrolled.

“We deeply apologize for the serious anxiety this matter has brought to parents and society,” RYB Education said in a statement Friday, adding that it has suspended three teachers.

“We are currently working with the police to provide relevant surveillan­ce materials and equipment; the teachers in question have been suspended, and we are cooperatin­g with the police investigat­ion.”

The official New China News Agency suggested in an editorial that in recent scandals, low teacher wages and patchy government oversight were partly to blame. “Laws must be enforced, supervisio­n strengthen­ed, teacher wages increased,” it said. “The child care industry cannot be allowed to grow in an uncivilize­d fashion.”

Officials also have acted to preempt any major social unrest. Photos posted online show a crowd of police at the school on Friday. Internet censors have deleted several disturbing videos of angry parents. On Friday, Beijing ’s major newspapers barely mentioned the case.

Yet the allegation­s still went viral on social media. On Thursday, the term “RYB” had more than 76 million mentions on WeChat. The top 13 stories on Weibo, its popular microblog, concerned the case.

Many internet users drew parallels to a South Korean film called “The Crucible” (2011), which depicted a reallife case of sexual abuse at a school for the hearing-impaired. The film sparked an outcry, and authoritie­s reopened an investigat­ion into the incident.

“I hope this is our ‘Crucible’ moment,” wrote another WeChat user. “Hopefully our last ‘Crucible’ moment.”

jonathan.kaiman @latimes.com Special correspond­ents Gaochao Zhang and Matt DeButts in The Times’ Beijing bureau contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Ng Han Guan Associated Press ?? A WOMAN leaves the RYB kindergart­en in Beijing with a child whom she withdrew from the school, the focus of the abuse inquiry.
Ng Han Guan Associated Press A WOMAN leaves the RYB kindergart­en in Beijing with a child whom she withdrew from the school, the focus of the abuse inquiry.
 ?? Nicolas Asfouri AFP/Getty Images ?? RYB EDUCATION NEW WORLD, which runs the kindergart­en, is a U.S.-listed company serving 300,000 children at branches in more than 300 Chinese cities.
Nicolas Asfouri AFP/Getty Images RYB EDUCATION NEW WORLD, which runs the kindergart­en, is a U.S.-listed company serving 300,000 children at branches in more than 300 Chinese cities.
 ?? Ng Han Guan Associated Press ?? THE RECENT allegation­s fit a pattern of abuse cases at Chinese schools and child care centers.
Ng Han Guan Associated Press THE RECENT allegation­s fit a pattern of abuse cases at Chinese schools and child care centers.

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