CHINA> Regional
Man jailed for abandoning his mom
By Cao Li (China Daily)
Updated: 2008-12-19 08:17

SHANGHAI - A man was sentenced to 18 months in prison on Thursday for abandoning his mother in a public square over a year ago, the Zhabei district people's court said.

Wang Kouma, 54, was found guilty of leaving his 83-year-old mother, Teng Jindi, at People's Square on Oct 11 last year.

He had earlier taken 270,000 yuan ($39,500) from her that had been given to her by the government as relocation expenses.

Police later found Teng, and a neighborhood committee took her to a hostel.

The committee appealed to Teng's five sons and two daughters to care for the woman, but they all said she was Wang's responsibility as he had taken the government money.

While Wang was the only one charged, none of Teng's seven children visited her at the hostel, Tao Yichu from the neighborhood committee said in court.

Teng died of a heart attack on Jan 5.

Wang was arrested in June and charged on Sept 26.

In court he denied abandoning his mother.

"I went to buy cigarettes, and when I came back she had disappeared," he said.

"I looked for her until 8 in the evening."

His attorney, Jin Honglin, said that as Wang was only one of seven children, he should not have had sole responsibility for caring for his mother, even if he had taken the government allowance.

The neighborhood committee did not tell Wang of his mother's whereabouts, and he had nothing to do with her death, he said.

But witnesses painted a different picture.

Wang Lijun, the police officer who found Teng, said: "She told me that her son had told her to ask the government for a place to live."

The court ruled that Wang abandoned his mother despite knowing she was in poor health.

As yet, he has not filed an appeal.

Chinese law states that anyone who fails in his or her duty to support an aged, minor or sick family member who later dies shall be sentenced to a prison term of not more than five years.

Zhang Jiehai, a sociologist with the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, said the case demonstrated the weaknesses of the current social welfare system and that Wang's siblings should also be punished for not caring for their mother.

"In an aging society, a better system must be set up to care for the elderly," he said.

By the end of last year, more than 20 percent of Shanghai's permanent residents were aged over 60.

"I expect there to be more cases like this in the future," Zhang said.

"As people live longer, families must care for each other."