Passenger women locked the crying girl in the toilet during the flight

There is a backlash after two female passengers locked a little girl in the plane’s toilet to stop her from crying during a flight in China.

From Jiangsu to Shanghai flight The incident has sparked a heated debate online about how to handle crying babies in public.

The two passengers who locked the girl in the toilet claimed that she was trying to help others. However, many on social media accused him of ‘scaring’ the girl and lacking compassion.

According to Juneau Airlines, the girl’s grandmother allowed female passengers to teach the girl a ‘lesson’. In the video, a woman can be seen telling the girl that she can leave the bathroom only if she stops crying.

One of the two women, Gu Ting Ting, defended her actions, saying she wanted to calm the girl down so other passengers could rest.

According to the report of the British broadcasting organization BBC News, Go Ting Ting China Responding to criticism of K’s Tik Tok-style channel ‘Dwayne’, she said that she prefers to act rather than be a spectator.

However, his explanation failed to stop the backlash and his social media account has since been made private.

According to the report of the British Broadcasting Corporation, a user wrote on the social media platform Weibo that ‘children cannot control their emotions when they are one or two years old. What’s wrong with crying? Didn’t you cry when you were little?’

The incident has raised questions about how to balance the needs of parents with crying babies and the rights of other passengers to keep flights calm.

In January, Korndon Dutch Airlines announced trial adult-only zones on its flights. The airline added that if someone wanted to sit in the child-free section on the flight from Amsterdam to the Caribbean, they could do so, but extra-large seats would cost between €45 and €100.

Some were happy to pay to sit in the adults-only section of the plane, while some passengers, recalling the problems with ‘smoking-free zones’ on planes, expressed surprise that airlines would accommodate sections for crying babies. How will you separate in style?

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This debate has gone beyond flights. In countries such as South Korea, ‘no kids zones’ are flourishing in cafes and restaurants.

A London pub’s decision to ban children has sparked debate about discrimination against parents, particularly women.

Earlier in April this year, a customer named Kyle shared a photo on X of a sign outside the restaurant that read ‘Dog Friendly, Child Free’.

This tweet went viral on X. Some criticized the restaurant for barring children.

Others claimed the restaurant was discriminating against women, especially women with children.

According to one user: ‘Banning children means banning parents. It affects women more.’

‘If you feel more comfortable sitting next to an animal than a human child and family, it means you have a bad attitude and don’t care about other people’s opinions.’


#Passenger #women #locked #crying #girl #toilet #flight
2024-08-31 02:30:25

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