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Chinese kid wrecks $56,000 of property in Labubu toy tantrum, shatters ceiling and chandelier | Trending

A Chinese influencer’s home suffered significant damage after a visiting child, upset at being denied a rare Labubu toy, shattered a glass ceiling and broke an Italian crystal chandelier worth a combined 400,000 yuan (US$56,000). A boy caused massive damage to a home after a tantrum over a Labubu toy.(Representational image/Unsplash) (Also read: ‘You can’t do that in America or Europe’: Foreigner stunned to see Porsche left unattended in China) Tantrum leads to destructionAccording to a report the South China Morning Post (SCMP), the incident was shared online male influencer “Little Azheng”, also known as “Tail Brother”. He said a relative visited his home with a young boy who became fixated on his Labubu doll, which was decorated with expensive jewellery. When the child’s request to have the toy was refused, he threw a tantrum, crying loudly and making a scene. In a fit of anger, the boy allegedly hurled a remote-control device into the air, smashing the living room’s mirror-glass ceiling valued at 100,000 yuan (US$14,000). SCMP reported that the child also damaged an Italian crystal chandelier worth an estimated 300,000 yuan (US$42,000). Extent of the damagePhotographs posted the influencer showed shards of glass scattered across the floor and the chandelier smashed on the ground. “The repair work for the ceiling alone requires removing and replacing all the remaining glass panels,” the influencer said. Despite the destruction, the boy reportedly showed no remorse. Parents plead povertySCMP reported that the boy’s parents asked the influencer not to publicise the matter or involve the child, claiming it could “affect the boy’s mood”. They insed they were too poor to pay the full cost of the damage. “We are poor and cannot afford compensation. There is no point in going to court, please do not involve the child,” they said, offering only 20,000 yuan (US$2,800) in two instalments. “Even if we have to sell everything, we can only pay this much,” they added. The influencer reluctantly agreed to the arrangement, stating, “Elders always love using kinship as emotional blackmail. It is incredibly boundary-crossing.” The labubu crazeLabubu dolls, originally popular in China, have gained a global following. Some individual figures have sold for extraordinary amounts. SCMP reported that one Labubu figure fetched over one million yuan (US$140,000) at an auction in Beijing in June.

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