The son of a Chinese official beat a man to death in a dispute over compensation after his dogs bit the victim, state media reported yesterday, in a case sparking outrage online.
The 24-year-old victim, Xie Benzong (謝本宗), was walking in a park in the central city of Changsha on Jan. 30 when he was bitten by two dogs belonging to Guo Bin (郭彬), the son of a local official, Xinhua news agency reported.
Guo, whom police described as a “company employee,” drove Xie to a hospital and agreed to give him 300 yuan (US$48) in compensation, Xinhua reported.
However, after treating him, the hospital informed Xie that the bill was more than 1,000 yuan.
Police were called and told Guo to pay 600 yuan, but he refused, Xinhua reported, citing Xie’s girlfriend.
The officers left and the two men began to fight, with Guo striking Xie on the chest and head, rendering him unconscious.
Guo drove away and Xie died five days later despite hospital treatment.
News of the case spread quickly on China’s popular online social networks, with many Internet users expressing outrage that police did not detain Guo until two days after the incident.
“This shows that the law has been nearly trampled to death by the relevant departments,” one user of Sina Weibo, a Chinese microblogging service, wrote on Sunday.
“If you want to know why there’s so much opposition to raising civil servants’ wages, it’s because of guanerdai (官二代) like this,” wrote another, using a Chinese term for the children of government officials.
According to the Xinhua report, Guo turned himself in and the case is currently under investigation. His family also paid 840,000 yuan in compensation to Xie’s family, Xinhua said.
Internet users in China frequently voice outrage over cases of the well-connected exhibiting outrageous behavior or appearing to be treated as above the law.
In March 2013, the son of a close ally of then-Chinese president Hu Jintao (胡錦濤) was left dead after a high-speed Ferrari crash in the capital.
Two female passengers, one of whom was naked, were both injured.
Ling Jihua (令計劃), the man’s father, was removed from a key party post and given a less high-profile position following the accident, which added to public perceptions in China of corrupt and high-living officials.
In another high-profile scandal in 2010, the son of a police chief tried to use his father’s status to avoid any consequences for a fatal car accident.
After running over a student in Hebei Province, Li Qiming (李啟銘) famously shouted: “Sue me if you dare. My father is Li Gang (李剛).”
His words became a catchphrase used to refer to children of powerful families who appeared to act with impunity.
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