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Footage of Chen and a group of men attacking women at a barbecue restaurant was widely circulated in China
Footage of Chen and a group of men attacking women at a barbecue restaurant was widely circulated in China. Photograph: @badiucao/Twitter
Footage of Chen and a group of men attacking women at a barbecue restaurant was widely circulated in China. Photograph: @badiucao/Twitter

China sentences man who attacked women at restaurant to 24 years

This article is more than 1 year old

Assault by Chen Jizhi and his friends on 10 June has sparked a national debate over gender-based violence

The main perpetrator of an assault against a group of women at a barbecue restaurant in China has been sentenced to 24 years in prison, after the case sparked a national debate over gender-based violence.

Chen Jizhi started hitting the women after they rejected his “harassment” in the early hours of 10 June in the city of Tangshan in Hebei province, east of Beijing, the court said in a statement.

When the women resisted, Chen and a group of his friends attacked them with chairs and bottles, the court said, the four women suffering “light” injuries.

The authorities have painted the incident as a gang-related crime, despite calls for a reckoning over violence against women after footage of the attack was widely shared.

Viral online essays criticising the attack as symbolic of the country’s larger problem of gender-based violence were censored.

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The court said a police investigation after the attack found that Chen had been the ringleader of a gang that “menaced the public” and that he had committed crimes including operating gambling dens since 2012.

Chen was found guilty of a list of offences including disorderly behaviour, intentional injury, robbery and “gathering a mob to fight”.

He was fined 320,000 yuan (£42,000) in addition to the 24-year prison sentence, and 27 accomplices were given sentences ranging from six months to 11 years.

Discussions of feminism have grown in China, despite resistance, widespread censorship and patchy legal support for victims of violence.

Women’s rights campaigners say domestic abuse remains pervasive and under-reported, while prominent feminists also face police harassment and detention.

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