A 60-year-old woman is at the centre of
controversy after she was detained by railway police for collecting 28 empty
bottles on a train in late March.
Teng Ziying, a farmer from Central China's Hunan Province, and her family
have returned a donation paid by the local railway police station and have
instead asked for a full explanation.
Teng Ziying and her granddaughter. [Xiaoxiang
Morning Post] |
Teng, who is in great need of money to treat her granddaughter's leukaemia,
said: "I demand an explanation rather than cash," Xinhua reported.
Teng bought a ticket on March 26 from Changsha, the provincial capital, to
her hometown Shimen to collect a treatment fee for her three-year-old
granddaughter who is in a hospital in the city. However, she boarded the wrong
train and transferred to another one the next morning with the same ticket.
During her 10-hour journey home, she picked up 28 empty bottles left in the
train's carriages, hoping to sell them. But when she got off the train, she was
taken to the local railway police station.
She pleaded with police that she had no idea that collecting empty bottles on
trains is prohibited. She claims she was told that "we don't let you know so as
to catch you."
After 4 hours of questioning and investigation, Teng was detained, accused of
"disturbing order on the train."
Two days later, Teng developed symptoms of illness and was permitted to call
her daughter. She was released when her family arrived and paid 400 yuan (US$50)
in bail and a 175-yuan (US$20) accommodation fee.
According to the railway police, the regulation stipulates that acts such as
gathering rubbish on trains and at stations should be punished.
Thus they are doing their job according to the rule, a leader of the railway
police said. He said Teng was turned in to local public security based on a full
investigation and evidence and received a punishment of five days' detention.
But due to Teng's health, she was kept there less than two days.
Local media reported Teng's story and she became the centre of public
attention.
A month later, leaders of the railway police station and local police
security paid respective visits to Teng's family and donated a total of 6,000
yuan (US$750) for her granddaughter's treatment.
Teng turned down the donation because public security refused to cancel her
case.
It was reported on Friday that the Hunan provincial public security
department will carry out further investigation and collect evidence.
Teng's story has now filtered out further afield. Legal experts said her
detention obviously lacked full evidence.
Jiang Xueyue, a researcher with Hunan University, noted that Teng's behaviour
had not caused social disorder such as the mess of the carriage and the economic
loss of the passengers yet she was severely punished for her actions, reported a
local Hunan newspaper.
He said regulations are set to secure the basic social order of every citizen
rather than undermine people's basic rights.
Yang Zheng, a 32-year old Beijing resident, said the story made her feel sad,
as the incident had added to the family's misery. She said she hoped law
enforcement authorities would put people first when implementing the law and
deal with each case individually.