Society
Relatives claim 1.2 m yuan for boy killed in escalator accident
Updated: 2011-07-11 07:55
By Wang Huazhong and Zheng Xin (China Daily)
BEIJING - The family of a boy killed in a subway escalator accident is considering legal action as negotiations over compensation stall.
Wu Shibo, 13, died and 30 other people were injured last Tuesday when a malfunction caused a rising escalator at the Beijing Zoo station on Line 4 to reverse.
The boy's father, Wu Conglin, who was among those injured, has demanded 1.2 million yuan ($185,615) from Beijing MTR Corp, which operates the line.
The company has countered with an offer of 700,000 yuan.
"We're still talking about the amount of compensation with the family of the victim," Yang Ling, spokesman of Beijing MTR Corp, told China Daily.
A total of 17 relatives of Wu Shibo have traveled to Beijing from Anhui province since the accident, including Huang Aiying, the victim's mother, who was sent to Beijing University People's Hospital after fainting at her hotel.
"I couldn't help thinking of my son," she said in a brief interview with China Daily. "It's unbelievable he's gone."
The boy's uncle, Huang Yuhua, said 1.2 million yuan is a reasonable sum to cover the death, funeral expenses, transportation costs and the loss of income and mental distress.
"We're not blackmailing anyone," he said. "We talked the compensation over with the Beijing MTR Corporation (on Saturday) and they only offered 700,000 (yuan) instead of the 1.2 million yuan we asked for.
"We hope we can reach an agreement or we'll take legal action."
Wu Na, sister of Wu Shibo, was also injured and remains in Beijing Children's Hospital.
Huang said her son had just been admitted to Bozhou No 2 Middle School, the second best middle school in town, and it was his first visit to the capital.
"He poured me a cup of tea and kept talking to me the night before he set off to Beijing," Huang recalled.
Huang Haoyu, elder cousin of Wu Shibo, described the boy as very obedient and talented. "He was champion in a city table tennis competition," he said.
Yu Lingyun, a professor at Tsinghua University's law school, said the family's compensation request was reasonable and could have been even higher considering the impact of the death.
"Considering the loss of a life, 1.2 million yuan is not excessive," said Yu. "They could file a civil suit for their rights if negotiations fail."
Wu Conglin said the family plans to donate some of the compensation to public education efforts on subway safety.
China Daily
(China Daily 07/11/2011 page5)
E-paper
Burning desire
Tradition overrides public safety as fireworks make an explosive comeback
Melody of life
Demystifying Tibet
Bubble worries
Specials
90th anniversary of the CPC
The Party has been leading the country and people to prosperity.
Say hello to hi panda
An unusual panda is the rising star in Europe's fashion circles
My China story
Foreign readers are invited to share your China stories.