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Communist Party officials in central Hubei province were sacked after Yan Cheng, a teenager with cerebral palsy, was left without adequate care when his father and brother were quarantined for coronavirus. Photo: Weixin

Communist officials fired after disabled Chinese boy died when relatives were put in coronavirus quarantine

  • Party secretary and township mayor sacked; other officials found responsible in death of Yan Cheng can expect to be disciplined, say investigators in Hubei
  • Lack of adequate care for teenager who had cerebral palsy prompts angry comments on social media
Two Communist Party officials in central Hubei province were sacked after the death of a disabled teenager who was left without adequate care for six days while his relatives were in coronavirus quarantine, a local government report said on Saturday.

Yan Cheng had cerebral palsy and died on January 29 while in the care of officials in Huajiahe township, Hongan county, more than 100 kilometres (62 miles) from Wuhan, the epicentre of the outbreak.

The county investigation – which put the boy’s age at 16 – found that Cheng’s father had entrusted his son’s care to village cadres and doctors, and although they looked after him daily, they “did not try their hardest to fulfil their duty of care and responsibilities”, according to the report.

Huajiahe party secretary Wang Baoquan and mayor Peng Zhihong were fired. Others found to be responsible for Cheng’s death could expect to be disciplined, the report said. It also said that the cause of his death was yet to be determined.

Yan Cheng, his father and brother were in Huajiahe for Lunar New Year. Photo: Handout

Cheng’s father and autistic 11-year-old younger brother were put in isolation on January 24 after reporting signs of fever, leaving the teenager without care, food or company.

The father, Yan Xiaowen, was confirmed as a coronavirus case on January 29 and sent to the county hospital for treatment, hours before Cheng died.

It was not clear what happened to Yan’s other son.

Left at home disabled boy dies after carer isolated for virus checks

Worried that Cheng was not getting proper care, his father appealed for help on Weibo, China’s Twitter-like network, on January 28.

“I have two disabled sons. My older son Yan Cheng has cerebral palsy. He cannot move his body, he cannot speak or look after himself. He has already been at home by himself for six days, with nobody to bathe him or change his clothes and nothing to eat or drink,” Yan wrote in a message that was later deleted.

The family had travelled from Wuhan to their ancestral village on January 17 to celebrate Lunar New Year. Yan reported feeling unwell about three days later.

On January 29, Damihexiaomi, a WeChat resource for families of children with autism and other conditions, reported that an aunt had fed Cheng three times and changed him twice in the six-day period, but ill health prevented her from doing more. She last saw her nephew on the day before he died, Damihexiaomi said.

Most of the central Chinese province has been under virtual lockdown since the number of cases of a coronavirus originating in Wuhan rose rapidly at the end of January.

News of the boy’s death and the sackings led to an outcry on social media.

“Someone’s child died. Why should you only be removed from your job?” read a comment on Weibo that drew more than 7,000 “likes”.

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“Village cadres, you know how many meals you yourselves need to eat in a day. How did you forget how many daily meals to give to another?” another user wrote.

“People with special needs and underprivileged families are an important target of care for community social organisations,” Chen Yueliang, an official with the Ministry of Civil Affairs, was quoted as saying by state broadcaster CCTV on Friday.

“Since the outbreak, many communities have mobilised party members and property wardens to visit communities, workplaces and businesses to strengthen their long-term care and assistance for special needs groups and underprivileged families.”

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