Man given death sentence for ex-wife’s livestream murder that shocked China

  • 10/14/2021
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A Chinese man has been sentenced to death after a court found him guilty of killing his ex-wife while she was livestreaming on social media last year. The intermediate people’s court of the Aba Tibetan and Qiang ethnic minority autonomous prefecture of Sichuan province said Tang Lu doused 30-year-old Lhamo with petrol and set her alight in September last year. The court accused Tang of intentional homicide and said his method was “extremely cruel”, the social impact was “extremely bad” and the crime was “extremely serious”. The case has shone a spotlight on domestic violence in China and continuing failures to protect victims despite changes to legislation and government pledges. Lhamo’s death, which followed multiple alleged assaults against her, unresolved complaints to police, and attempts to leave Tang, prompted campaigns to strengthen laws and make divorce easier for women who experience violence. Lhamo was a popular social media broadcaster in the south-western county of Jinchuan, Sichuan, with hundreds of thousands of followers on Douyin, China’s version of TikTok. Her videos offered a window into her life but no sign of the alleged abuse. Her followers saw picturesque scenes of Lhamo’s rural life: picking herbs, walking through the mountains, cooking dinner and working around her house where she lived with her husband and two children. What they did not see was her battle to protect herself and her children from a violent ex-husband whom she had twice divorced, the second time after he allegedly coerced her into remarrying. In early September last year Lhamo was livestreaming from her father’s kitchen when a man walked in. Hundreds of people reportedly watching at the time heard her scream and then the screen went dark. Lhamo’s sister Dolma later found her in the intensive care unit of an Aba prefecture hospital with burns to 90% of her body. She was transferred to Sichuan and her family appealed for donations to help pay for her treatment, drawing attention to her case. By the end of the month she had died. Campaigns over Lhamo’s death intensified when the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, gave a speech to a UN conference a day later saying the protection of women’s rights and interests “must become a national commitment”. Hashtags including #LhamoAct, calling for laws allowing victims an automatic divorce, spread across the internet but were quickly shut down by censors. There werecalls for stronger enforcement of a then four-year-old domestic violence law. “With so many signs and alarms, where did the police go? Where is the law?” said one commenter. Lhamo’s death was among several significant domestic violence cases referred to in a song by the Chinese singer Tan Weiwei. A 2020 report by Beijing Equality, a women’s rights advocacy group, said that since the 2016 legislation was enacted, more than 920 women had died from domestic violence – three every five days. Lu Xiaoquan, a legal aid lawyer for women’s rights and executive director of Qianqian law firm in Beijing, said Lhamo’s death had captured the nation’s attention in part because of her social media profile, but also because she died years after the enactment of a law designed to protect women like her. “The Chinese public has understood domestic violence better. There are fewer people who think domestic violence is a ‘family matter’,” said Lu. “The tolerance of serious cases of domestic violence has dropped significantly.” Lu said the law had strengthened definitions of domestic violence to include emotional abuse as well as physical, and to apply to victims and perpetrators who live together even if they are not family. “It shows the basic legal concept of the rule of law in terms of anti-domestic violence,” she said. But its enforcement has been found wanting, and there remain hurdles including overcoming traditional taboos and values among communities and authorities, particularly in rural areas. Lu noted that many women in rural areas often returned to abusive husbands, finding they had no financial or other support after trying to leave. “There is a lack of social support system for women who experience gender violence, including sexual harassment and domestic violence,” said Lu. “The victims are alone in facing their perpetrators.” Lhamo’s sister Dolma has said Tang was known to police and had repeatedly assaulted his wife after their marriage when she was 17. After Lhamo left him the first time in March 2020, he allegedly forced her to remarry by threatening their children. He continued to be violent, Dolma told the New York Times, and Lhamo filed for divorce again in June and hid with her family. Tang looked for her, allegedly assaulting Dolma when she would not tell him where her sister was. A court granted the divorce but gave Tang custody of the children, and Lhamo spent months in the mountains, continuing to post lighthearted videos. Two days before the attack, she told her viewers she was going home. Lu said local police often still considered domestic violence to be a family or private matter in which the public – and public authorities – should not usually get involved. “So they didn’t intervene in a timely manner to break the vicious cycle,” Lu said. “This shows a lack of understanding of the nature of domestic violence, and a lack of training about the awareness of domestic violence for local police, which means they won’t be able to take the right actions.” Three days after the alleged attack, having previously dismissed Lhamo’s complaints of her husband’s violence as a “family matter”, county police began investigating Tang. Ten days after her death, on 10 December, the people’s procuratorate in Jinchuan approved his arrest on suspicion of intentional homicide. Authorities were finally taking it seriously, but the response was too late for Lhamo.

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