Search for justice after China school abuse

Ray

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Search for justice after China school abuse

At first glance, Erliban village appears to be covered in rubbish.

But the town, in northern China's Hebei province, is actually devoted to waste recycling. Mountains of glass bottles and scraps of plastic crowd every available space.
Sitting in the middle of it all is a boarding school. Not one for the wealthy but, like many boarding schools in China, a school for the sons and daughters of local farmers and migrant workers. Poor families send their children here, hoping they'll get an education that will elevate them above the grime and dirt pervading this place.
The Zhang family sent their teenage son there after a visit from recruiters.

"We were told the school was one of the best out here. It was supposed to have military-style discipline and good teachers," Mr Zhang explains.

Those were empty promises, they now say.

Last December, a teacher at the school - a man named Li Jian - was sent to prison. For years, he had abused the Zhangs' son and several other teenage boys. We've changed the family's name to protect the boy's identity.

Li Jian admitted to forcing the students back to his home. There, they were bound and gagged, tortured and raped, a court heard. Li Jian threatened his victims with death if they told anyone what took place in his apartment.

As the abuse stretched on, the boy became extremely depressed.

"He used to cry and refuse to return to school," his mother remembers. "At first, we didn't understand why. My husband became very angry. But now we know. Our son was suffering."

Eventually, the boy became the first to speak up. "The situation was getting worse so I told my parents," he whispers. "But the memories still haunt me."

Li Jian, the teacher, was in charge of discipline at the school. In court, the boys testified that Li would pick on the students who made mistakes during the school's morning exercise drills. Those are the ones he would bring back to his home for "extra instruction".

Li received a prison sentence of two years and 10 months. China has no laws banning male rape over the age of 14. The victims could not prove the sexual abuse started before they were 14, so the court only found Li Jian guilty of detaining his students.

Frustrated with China's piecemeal child abuse laws, the victim's families are appealing for a harsher punishment. They're pushing Li Jian to pay compensation so the boys can receive costly psychological counselling.

They feel other parts of the system, too, failed their sons.

When the Zhangs first went to the police station to report the crime, police there appeared to be familiar with Li Jian, who had worked at other boarding schools in the province before coming to Erliban village.

"When we said the teacher's name, the officer said "Li Jian? That creep is doing it again!" So they knew about this before but didn't do anything to stop him," Mr Zhang fumes.

The police ignored our repeated interview requests.

School officials refused to answer similar allegations from the victims' families and several teachers that the school had also turned a blind eye to the abuse.

It seems that no-one really knows what takes place behind closed doors in China's boarding schools. Thirty million children across mainland China attend schools far away from home, according to Ministry of Education statistics from last year.

Advocates from Save the Children warn there's a "high risk" of abuse at Chinese boarding schools without proper safeguards in place. Children as young as five live far away from their parents, at schools with no teacher background checks and no means to report sexual or physical violence.

Search for justice after China school abuse - BBC News
It is most unfortunate and saddening since it is breach of trust and faith. It is not a case of consenting adult, but downright misusing authority.

However, homosexuality is a complex issue that plagues the world to find a suitable answer.

In so far as China is concerned, it is more complex since the One Child Policy has upset the gender ratio and the fact there are 'left behind women' or 'left over women' or "sheng nu" who do not marry since they cannot find husbands who earn more than them. National Bureau of Statistics data shows there are now about 20 million more men under 30 than women under 30.

The proportion of unmarried men that age is higher - over a third. Then are called guang gun. But that doesn't mean they will easily match up, since Chinese men tend to "marry down", both in terms of age, financial status and educational attainment.

This adds to the social problems.

Outspoken sexologist Li Yinhe says an estimated 80 percent of gay men and women are there. Or approximately 40 million gays.

As Steven Jiang points out, homosexuality was once not only tolerated in China but celebrated. In the Han dynasty scribes kept a record of the emperor's male lovers and even as late as the Qing dynasty the literati (and more than one Qing emperor) carried on affairs with young men, especially at the time when Beijing Opera came to Beijing and a flood of young actors, all male, came to perform.
Homosexuality in China
 
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