Chinese court blames producer of cartoon after 2 kids burned by friend copying scene from show

By Louise Watt, The Associated Press

BEIJING, China – A Chinese court has ruled that the producer of a hit kids cartoon was partly to blame for the injuries suffered by two children when their friend tied them to a tree and set them on fire in an imitation of a scene from the show, state media reported.

Two brothers aged 7 and 4 from eastern Jiangsu province were badly burned in April by the actions of their 10-year-old friend who confessed he was copying a scene from “Xi Yangyang & Hui Tailang,” which translates as “Pleasant Goat and Big Big Wolf,” the official Xinhua News Agency said.

The 7-year-old suffered 80 per cent burns to his body and his brother 40 per cent.

The cartoon popular among children and adults features the wolf who hunts the goat and tries to prevent it from escaping, to no avail. Scenes have included the goat being plunged into boiling water and receiving electric shocks, and the wolf’s wife regularly beats her husband over the head with a pan when he fails to bring the goat home for their dinner.

Xinhua said the legal guardians of the boy identified as Shun Shun, who set his friends alight, and the producer, Guangzhou-based Creative Power Entertaining Co., Ltd., are jointly responsible for the two brothers’ injuries, according to the verdict of the court. Shun Shun’s guardians will have to pay 60 per cent of the injured brothers’ compensation and the company will pay 15 per cent. It didn’t say who would pay the remainder.

Xinhua didn’t give the total compensation amount, but other media reports said the company would have to pay 39,000 yuan ($6,400), and that the case was a civil one brought by the brothers’ family.

The Donghai County People’s Court refused to answer questions and referred queries to their propaganda office, where calls rang unanswered. The company declined to comment.

Users of China’s lively Twitter-like sites poured scorn on the assigning of blame on the company, with some questioning why state broadcaster China Central Television, which televises the cartoon, wasn’t being held responsible.

Hao Rui, a lawyer from Beijing Yingke Law Firm who specializes in lawsuits involving the media industry, said it was the first time he had heard of a producer being sued and held liable for a child imitating something seen on TV. One reason may be because the other defendants and the children’s family can’t afford to pay the medical costs, he said.

In 2010, Creative Power Entertaining signed an agreement with Buena Vista International for the latter to air “Pleasant Goat and Big Big Wolf” on Disney channels in the Asia-Pacific region in more than 10 languages, including English.

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AP news assistant Zhao Liang contributed to this report.

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