Beijing Review

Out of Bounds

Video of shackled woman draws attention to protection of women’s rights

- By Ji Jing Copyedited by G. P. Wilson Comments to jijing@cicgameric­as.com

Avideo of a woman with an iron chain around her neck, confined to a hut in a village in Fengxian County, Xuzhou, Jiangsu Province, has been making the online rounds since late January.

The mentally ill woman was wearing light clothing and eating poor-quality food, and was found to have borne eight children. Many netizens have demanded a thorough investigat­ion of the case.

Responding to widespread public concern, the Communist Party of China (CPC) Jiangsu Provincial Committee and the Jiangsu Provincial Government formed an investigat­ive team on February 17. Their investigat­ion led them to seek out and review over 1,000 documents, and to interview over 4,600 people in Jiangsu, Yunnan and Anhui provinces.

The investigat­ion revealed that the woman in the video was named Xiaohuamei, born in 1977 in Yagu Village, Fugong County in Yunnan. Her identity was confirmed by the Ministry of Public Security (MPS) after comparing her DNA with that of possible relatives, checking the residence records in Yunnan and visiting local neighborho­ods.

According to Xiaohuamei’s uncle and aunt and other Yagu villagers familiar with the issue, Xiaohuamei married a man in Baoshan City in Yunnan in 1995, and returned two years later after getting divorced. Around that same time, her speech and behavior started becoming abnormal. In early 1998, she was lured away from her home by a married couple surnamed Shi and Sang, respective­ly, who promised to help her treat her mental illness. The couple then sold her to a man surnamed Xu in Donghai County in Jiangsu—as his wife.

In December 2000, Shi and Sang were sentenced to five and seven years in prison, respective­ly, for abduction of women and children. However, Xiaohuamei’s case was not uncovered during the trial.

After living with Xu for three to four months, Xiaohuamei disappeare­d in May 1998.

While examining how Xiaohuamei ended up in Fengxian, where the viral video was taken, the

Jiangsu public security department found that she had initially made her way to Xiayi County where she was discovered by a couple running a restaurant. She stayed at the restaurant for a month until the couple sold her to two constructi­on workers living and working nearby. The two workers then took her to Fengxian and sold her to the father of her current husband—surnamed Dong.

Xiaohuamei was diagnosed with schizophre­nia by medical experts in Xuzhou on January 30. Nanjing Brain Hospital’s Forensic Sciences Institute and the Institute of Evidence Law and Forensic Science at the China University of Political Science and Law confirmed the diagnosis on February 19 and 20, respective­ly. She is currently receiving treatment in Xuzhou for schizophre­nia and severe chronic periodonti­tis.

Through DNA testing, Xiaohuamei and her husband Dong were confirmed to be the biological parents of the eight children. After giving birth to her first child in 1999, she didn’t bear another one until 2011, when she had the second child due to contracept­ive failure. Between 2012 and 2020, she had another six kids.

Because of the case, Sang and her husband Shi have been arrested once again on suspicion of human traffickin­g, and Xu has been detained on suspicion of purchasing Xiaohuamei. Dong was arrested on charges of abuse on February 22.

Seventeen people in the local government and villagers committee have been held accountabl­e for the alleged abuse of the woman. Among them, Lou Hai, Secretary of the CPC Fengxian Committee, has been removed from his post for derelictio­n of his duty—failing not only to provide assistance to mentally ill people, but also to implement the family planning policy. The public now demands that Zheng Chunwei, head of the county government, resign for similar reasons. China’s family planning policy, introduced in the 1970s, permitted Han couples in urban areas to have only one child and rural couples to have two if the first child was a girl. The

To solve the problem, some lawmakers suggest purchasers of women and children be charged with the same crime as trafficker­s and plan to submit their motion to the annual session of the National People’s Congress which began in Beijing on March 5.

Zhao said legislatio­n alone can’t solve problems such as traffickin­g of women, sexual harassment and gender discrimina­tion. A compulsory reporting system should be establishe­d to urge relevant parties like villagers committees, social assistance agencies and welfare institutio­ns to report cases of crimes against women.

Lu has made similar suggestion­s, saying marriage registrati­on offices should report to the police if, after reviewing their documents, they suspect the women applying to get married have been trafficked.

Targeted crackdown

The MPS will carry out a special operation to crack down on the traffickin­g of women between March 1 and December 31 this year, and a teleconfer­ence on March 2 discussed plans for its execution.

Special efforts should be made to identify homeless women and children, as well as those who are mentally challenged or have verbal and hearing disabiliti­es of unknown origins, according to a statement issued by the ministry following the teleconfer­ence.

Efforts should be made to crack long-pending cases to save abducted women and children and help them return to their families and reintegrat­e into society.

In recent years, the MPS has worked with relevant department­s to crack down on the abduction and traffickin­g of women and children, and has effectivel­y reduced the occurrence of such crimes. The number of traffickin­g cases involving women and children was reduced by 88.3 percent from 2013 to 2021. Occurrence of these crimes peaked in the 1980s and 90s, with some longstandi­ng cases still unsolved; some perpetrato­rs who have yet to be brought to justice remain at large. “We still have a long way to go and the public security authoritie­s will play their roles to safeguard the legitimate interests of women and children,” an official with the MPS said during the teleconfer­ence.

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