The court, the Yantai Intermediate People’s Court in the
eastern province of Shandong, reported the executions of Zhang Lidong and his
daughter Zhang Fan in a statement on its official social media account, noting
that the two had “committed murder and used a cult to intentionally break the
law.” The court did not say when the executions took place.
The Zhangs were members of the Church of Almighty God, a
Christian sect that the Chinese government outlawed in 1995 and has labeled an
“evil cult.” They had entered the McDonald’s with other members of their church,
hoping to recruit followers on the evening of May 28 in the city of Zhaoyuan. At
the restaurant, they encountered the victim, Wu Shuoyan, 35, who was waiting for
her husband and young son, state television reported during the Zhangs’ trial in
August. After Ms. Wu twice declined to give her phone number, the group
identified her as an “evil spirit” and attacked her with a chair, mops and a
storm of kicks that left her dead in a pool of blood on the floor.
“I beat her with all my might and stomped on her, too,” said
an unrepentant Mr. Zhang in an interview from prison that aired on state
television. “She was a demon. We had to destroy her.”
The killing was recorded on a cellphone by one of several
bystanders who watched the attack but did not intervene. Posted and shared
widely online, the video set off a debate about the lack of help from witnesses
as well as accusations that the police had been slow to respond.
In October, the Zhangs were convicted and sentenced to death,
while three other defendants received sentences of seven years, 10 years and
life in prison. The executions were carried out after China’s Supreme People’s
Court approved the death penalties, as it must for all such sentences.
The Church of Almighty God, also known as Eastern Lightning,
was founded in northeastern China in 1989 and teaches that Jesus Christ has
returned to Earth as a Chinese woman who will save followers from the
apocalypse. The sect has pledged to slay the “Great Red Dragon,” a reference to
the ruling Communist Party. After the killing in May, the Chinese authorities
began a sweeping crackdown on the sect and claim to have detained hundreds of
its members.
A version of this article appears in print on February 3,
2015, on page A9 of the New York edition with the headline: China Executes
Members of Sect for Beating a Woman to Death. Order Reprints| Today's
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