A Chinese language man has been performed for murdering their ex-wife by setting her alight while she was livestreaming.
The girl, known as Lamu, was a well-known social media character on Douyin, China’s version of TikTok.
Hundreds of thousands of her followers had watched videos regarding her life in the mountains of Sichuan province.
The case put the spotlight on violence against ladies in China. One particular survey suggests a quarter of all Chinese females have suffered from domestic abuse.
The mother-of-two is reported to get approached police regarding her husband’s assault while they were married only to be told it had been a family matter.
When her husband Tang Lu was sentenced to death, the particular court in Aba prefecture, a remote countryside area in the south-west of Sichuan province where a large number of cultural Tibetans live, discovered that his crime had been “extremely cruel” and the social impact had been “extremely bad”.
In June 2020, Lamu divorced Tang who, the court said, had a new history of violence against her.
About three a few months later he doused her with petrol at her father’s home and set her alight. She experienced burns to 90% of her entire body and died fourteen days later.
The case caused outrage across the country and prompted renewed debate about assault against women.
Thousands of Lamu’s followers still left messages on her Douyin page, while a lot of users of the microblogging platform Weibo required justice using hashtags that were later censored.
China criminalised domestic violence in 2016 but it remains wide-spread, particularly in rural areas.
Several activists fear that the recently introduced required 30-day “cooling off” period for married couples who wish to divorce may make it harder for females to leave abusive relationships.