Hong Kong (CNN) โ Two airline passengers who locked a strangerโs crying grandchild in a plane restroom have caused outrage in China and sparked a heated online debate on how to handle upset children in public spaces.
The incident went viral this week after one of the two women involved posted a video on Chinese social media, which showed them inside a locked lavatory with the wailing girl, who appeared to be about a year old.
โWe wonโt let you out unless you stop crying,โ a woman sitting on the toilet told the toddler as she struggled out of the adultโs lap and reached for the door, according to the video posted on Douyin, Chinaโs version of TikTok.
As the girl stopped crying, the woman filming the video picked her up and told her: โIf you make any noise again, weโll come back (to the bathroom).โ
The incident took place August 24 aboard a Juneyao Airlines flight from the southwestern city of Guiyang to Shanghai.
The toddler was flying with her grandparents and cried non-stop during the nearly three-hour flight, the airline said in a statement Monday. The two passengers took the child to the restroom to โeducate herโ with her grandmotherโs consent, the statement added.
But a day later, as criticism mounted, the airlineโs customer service department apologized for the incident and โoversight of the crew,โ adding it condemned the two passengersโ behavior, according to the state-run Southern Metropolis Daily.
One of the women, who posted the video online, said her intention was to ensure a โrestful flightโ for other passengers. But her post quickly met a backlash, with many social media users accusing her of being heartless and bullying the child. The video was later deleted.
โAdults in their 30s can have emotional breakdowns, but people donโt allow toddlers to have theirs,โ said one comment on Chinaโs X-like Weibo platform, garnering thousands of likes.
โWe were all once children โฆ Donโt be a cold-blooded adult,โ read another popular comment.
Many others expressed concern that the incident may negatively impact the childโs mental health.
Multiple Chinese state media outlets have also weighed in, accusing the two women of โinappropriateโ behavior and calling for โgreater understandingโ from the public toward young children who cannot control their emotions.
In recent years, complaints about young children crying or acting out on flights and trains have regularly trended on Chinese social media, with many accusing parents of not doing enough to manage their kidsโ behavior.
These incidents have fueled an ongoing debate about parenting in public places in China, where the government is desperately trying to persuade couples to have more children.
The-CNN-Wire
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