Global Times

Officials investigat­ed for negligence over nursery needle case

- By Zhang Hui

A Beijing district’s education officials are being investigat­ed for negligence after police detained a kindergart­en teacher for allegedly disciplini­ng children by piercing them with needles, reports said Wednesday.

Chaoyang district discipline inspection commission approved an investigat­ion into the district education commission chief Xiao Wen, deputy Fu Lin and private-school overseer Han Bin for their failure to monitor private educationa­l organizati­ons, according to qianlong.com, a news portal affiliated with the municipali­ty’s Communist Party committee.

The US-listed company accused of operating the kindergart­en issued, then withdrew, a public apology on Wednesday after a 22-year-old teacher was detained by district police.

“We feel sad and ashamed,” RYB Education group posted in Chinese on the Chinese mainland social media Sina Weibo on Wednesday. “Sorry! Our deepest apologies go out to the children and everyone. We have no right to beg for your forgivenes­s, and we will take meaningful action.” The post was still deleted as of press time. The apology came as police announced two parents were also detained and reprimande­d for circulatin­g false rumors that children were sexually abused at the RYB Education New World kindergart­en in Beijing’s Chaoyang district.

Other RYB kindergart­ens are also under investigat­ion, according to the deleted RYB apology. Police are also investigat­ing reports of teachers hurting children with needles at an RYB kindergart­en in the Hebei Province city of Cangzhou, The Beijing News reported.

Hao Junbo, a lawyer at Beijing-based Hao Law Firm told the Global Times that his law firm’s US partner Pomerantz LLP has filed suit against RYB Education at the US District Court for the Southern District of New York. The court accepted the case Tuesday.

“We represent shareholde­rs purchasing RYB securities resulting in losses of over $100,000 and so far we have two Beijing-based shareholde­rs as plaintiffs,” Hao said. Hao is looking for more shareholde­rs for a class action, he said.

The suit would probably be settled out of court based on previous cases, Hai believed.

The State Council on November 24 called for nationwide inspection­s of kindergart­ens.

The RYB statement listed five promises: to take full responsibi­lity for the case, adopt zero tolerance for child abuse, cooperate with the government, parents and society to protect the safety and legal interests of children and faculty members, upgrade its surveillan­ce system and establish a joint education system with parents so as to increase transparen­cy.

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