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A Taiwanese Boy Who Happened Thrown 27 Times During A Judo Class Lost Life Support.

A seven-year-old boy who was thrown during was hit 27 times during judo training and died in Taiwan. In April, he suffered a severe brain hemorrhage after attending a judo class where his classmates and coaches practiced throwing at him.

The unidentified boy later fell into a coma and underwent life support treatment. His parents decided to stop life support after nearly 70 days, local media reported.

Violent judo class that puts a boy in a coma

In the late 1960s, the boy's coach was charged with physical assault resulting in severe injury and doing a minor to commit a crime, according to the local Taipei Times news site. The coach, identified only by his last name, Ho, was released earlier this month on NT100,000 (US$3,583; GBP 2,587) bail.

However, prosecutors will change the charge to "fatal injury after the victim's death," according to Taiwan News. If convicted, he faces anything from at least seven years in prison to life in prison, the report said.

Respect and honor

The seven-year-old attended judo class on April 21 under the tutelage of his uncle, who reportedly filmed him in style to show his mother that judo might not be for him. The video shows that an older classmate threw him several times during training. In the video, he container be heard screaming, but his coach orders him to stand up and tells the older boy to keep throwing him before lifting him further and throwing him to the ground.

He eventually passed out, although his family said his coach accused him of feigning unconsciousness. There are questions about why his uncle didn't stop the coach. Still, experts in Taiwan say that there has long been an understanding of respect and respect for teachers - which sometimes means accepting their authority regardless of the circumstances.

The boy's mother told reporters that his uncle "felt bad about what had happened." It was later discovered that the coach did not have a license. "I still remember the morning I took her to school," her mother said earlier. "He turned around and said, 'Mom, goodbye.'