Post Magazine

Second employee caught on video allegedly maltreating toddler at Hong Kong charity's care home

A child abuse scandal at a residential care home under one of Hong Kong's leading charity groups escalated as another employee was found to have allegedly maltreated a youngster.

The Social Welfare Department discovered the latest incident while continuing an investigation at the home under Po Leung Kuk's residential childcare service in Causeway Bay on Tuesday.

The investigation was launched after a 33-year-old employee was arrested on September 20 on suspicion of ill-treating six children aged between one and three. She was found to have roughly pushed the children onto play mats during a random check by the charity and Social Welfare Department.

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

Members of the department's Child Care Centres Advisory Inspectorate combing through security camera footage at the centre saw a second staff member apparently improperly handling a toddler, a spokesman said.

The department asked the charity to provide details about the staff member and the child involved.

The social worker handling the child's case was also called to the centre. The young resident was later examined at a hospital that evening.

The case was handed to police.

A police spokesman said it was notified about the findings relating to the case by the department on Wednesday. The Hong Kong Island regional crime unit was investigating.

The charity said previously it had zero tolerance for any inappropriate treatment of children and would handle the case in a serious manner.

The home accommodates children, from newborns to age three, who lack adequate care because of family problems. It is one of the only two homes in the city that provide residential services for that age range.

The other provider, the Hong Kong Society for the Protection of Children, has faced scrutiny after police arrested 34 workers for allegedly abusing 40 toddlers at the care home it runs after suspected cases first came to light last December.

Earlier on Wednesday, the panel on welfare services in the legislature visited the Children's Residential Home to learn about the operation after the implementation of its reform project in March.

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2022. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

More from Post Magazine

Post Magazine3 min readWorld
Australian Avocados Could Be Next To Benefit From Improving China Ties, Growing Demand For Superfruit
Among familiar Australian products such as wine, lobsters, beef and dairy products, warming ties between Australia and China may bring another new choice to Chinese customers: avocados. But the slow progress of negotiations on agreed phytosanitary pr
Post Magazine5 min readAmerican Government
FBI Official Admits Mistakes, Vows To Improve Relations With Asian-American Communities
In an unusual public admission, a senior FBI official told an audience of Asian-Americans that some of the bureau's past actions have had a "negative impact" on the community but that "certainly was not the intent". Jill Murphy, deputy assistant dire
Post Magazine3 min readWorld
Solve China's 'Overcapacity Problem' By Helping Developing Nations Go Green, Central Bank Adviser Urges
To help developing countries expedite their green transition while simultaneously digesting China's industrial overcapacity and enhancing the internationalisation of its financial sector, Beijing should take a page from the US' old foreign-aid initia

Related Books & Audiobooks