A migrant worker sentenced to death for killing four people and
seriously injuring one in a fit of rage over his unpaid wages is
waiting the verdict of his appeal against the sentence.
An intermediate people's court in the Ningxia
Hui Autonomous Region sentenced Wang Binyu, a migrant worker,
to death earlier this year for killing his foreman and three of the
foreman's family members. Wang also seriously wounded a
co-worker.
Wang stabbed the victims to death over his unpaid wages.
Wang later appealed to the Ningxia High People's Court, but the
court has yet to make its decision.
The high court has refused to comment on the case before it
hands down its verdict.
"The high court has exceeded the time limit for handing down the
verdict," the plaintiff's attorney Wu Shaozhi told China
Daily in a telephone interview yesterday. "But it might be
good news for Wang Binyu as it shows the court is dealing with the
case in detail and public opinion will be more influential."
Wu is expected to arrive in Yinchuan, capital of Ningxia, today
in a final attempt to persuade the court to hand down a "death with
years of reprieve" penalty, a less severe punishment that means he
could spend time in jail instead.
The lawyer said the public has shown tremendous sympathy for
Wang. Donations, including cash, have been made to his family.
Wang's story has been hogging the media limelight since early
this month. The tragedy triggered widespread discussion about the
death penalty.
"As for the whole picture, China is on its way to abolish the
death penalty," said Wu, who insisted Wang deserves a less severe
penalty.
In a fit of rage, the 28-year-old man killed his foreman Wu Hua
and three of Wu's family members in May after Wu failed to give
Wang more than 5,000 yuan (US$620) in unpaid wages.
Prior to the killings, Wang, who reportedly needed the money to
pay for medical costs for his father, had asked local courts and
the labor department for help without success.
When Wang asked the foreman for this wages a second time, he was
abused and beaten.
"I couldn't stand it any more," Wang said after. "I was fed up
with them, and I stabbed five persons with a knife."
Wang turned himself in to the police.
This case is significant because it sheds light on the lack of
effective legal remedies for the underprivileged group of migrant
workers.
According to statistics released by the People's Daily
on Monday, the country's main labor source consists of 120 million
rural workers who contribute more than 530 billion yuan (US$65.4
billion) a year to local economies outside their hometowns.
(China Daily September 21, 2005)