A Chinese woman aka ‘Tiger Mom’ had a six-month prison term upheld by a
local court, which ruled that she had gone “too far” for flogging her
foster son over unfinished homework.
Legal experts say the case has shed light on the controversial practice
of physical punishment in Chinese families to encourage young children
to excel.
The case broke in April after widely shared pictures on the Internet
showed a boy, known only by his surname Shi, with raw red welts
criss-crossing his back.
Nanjing police detained his foster mother, Li Zhengqin, who confessed to beating the nine-year-old boy with a backscratcher and skipping rope for not doing his homework and telling lies.
The boy is the third child of a rural family in Anhui province, according to local media.
He was taken in by Li, his aunt, in the hope that he would receive a better education in the city.
Li was handed a prison term in September, following a medical report that declared the boy had suffered “minor injury”. She appealed against the judgment.
Adding to the controversy, the boy and his biological parents have pleaded for mercy for Li. His parents said Li loved their son, but had just taken the wrong approach in disciplining him.
During last Friday’s hearing, Li’s lawyer showed a video made by the boy, in which he said he wanted Li to return home, and for his family to be back together.
The boy’s biological mother said the boy was temporarily back in her custody, but she was worried about the poor conditions in their rural home, and the child’s future.
Nanjing police detained his foster mother, Li Zhengqin, who confessed to beating the nine-year-old boy with a backscratcher and skipping rope for not doing his homework and telling lies.
The boy is the third child of a rural family in Anhui province, according to local media.
He was taken in by Li, his aunt, in the hope that he would receive a better education in the city.
Li was handed a prison term in September, following a medical report that declared the boy had suffered “minor injury”. She appealed against the judgment.
Adding to the controversy, the boy and his biological parents have pleaded for mercy for Li. His parents said Li loved their son, but had just taken the wrong approach in disciplining him.
During last Friday’s hearing, Li’s lawyer showed a video made by the boy, in which he said he wanted Li to return home, and for his family to be back together.
“I’m not a bad mother. I was just trying to discipline my child,” Li said at the hearing.She apologised for her misbehaviour and pleaded not guilty.
The boy’s biological mother said the boy was temporarily back in her custody, but she was worried about the poor conditions in their rural home, and the child’s future.