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A shrine to the 10-year-old girl allegedly murdered on October 20 by a 13-year-old boy in Dalian, Liaoning province, taken from a video published by state-run media Beijing News. The broadcaster blurred the victim's face due to her age.
(CNN)The alleged murder of a 10-year-old girl by a 13-year-old boy in China has raised questions over the country's criminal responsibility laws after it was announced the suspect cannot be charged.
The case, in the northeastern city of Dalian, has provoked intense debate over when and how young offenders should be punished.
Under China's Criminal Law, those aged 14 to 18 can be held criminally liable if they have committed a serious offense, such as homicide, rape, drug trafficking, robbery or arson. Those over 18 can be charged criminally for any kind of offense.
But those under 14 can't be charged and punished as criminals. They are either returned to their parents to be disciplined or -- more rarely -- sent to a correctional facility for young offenders, according to Michelle Miao, a criminal law expert at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.
The girl's body was found on October 20, hours after her older brother dropped her off at a painting class, according to the state-run China Daily.
When the girl failed to return home, her parents went out to look for her, the newspaper reported. They found her body near their home and alerted police, who that night detained a 13-year-old boy. Police said the boy confessed to the killing following an interrogation.
Speaking to local news outlet Jinyun News, the girl's father said the boy had brought his daughter to his home, sexually assaulted her and stabbed her to death. He then disposed of the body in a wooded area, according to her father.
Police said the boy wouldn't be charged because he is under 14 years old and therefore hadn't reached the age of legal responsibility, according to Article 17 of China's Criminal Law. This legal doctrine -- known as doli incapax, a Latin phrase meaning incapable of criminal intent or malice -- aims to avoid sentencing a child as an adult, because he doesn't have the maturity to appreciate the wrongfulness of what he has done.
The boy was instead sent to a juvenile rehabilitation center for three years. Miao said that punishment "is a relatively harsh measure, since it involves restricting his movements, making it akin to a form of detention."
'The demon is protected'
The case has generated heated debate in China. "The girl is dead but the demon who killed her is being protected!," one user fumed on Weibo, China's equivalent to Twitter, adding that the alleged perpetrator would be able to "start a new life in three years."
Many comments called for young offenders to be punished more harshly. "It doesn't matter if a person is 10 or 70 years old," one user wrote. "Age should not be an excuse for crimes." Another said he felt strongly that "there should be no age limit for those vicious criminal cases."
https://www.cnn.com/2019/10/31/china/china-murder-criminal-responsibility-intl-hnk/index.html