Some 200 residents -- including the eight-year-old's own grandfather -- signed a petition to expel him from their village in China's southwestern Sichuan province, in a bid to "protect villagers' health". The case has prompted huge debate on Chinese social media and highlighted the stigma attached to the disease in a country where sufferers face widespread discrimination.
The boy, who has been given the pseudonym Kunkun by media, was born HIV-positive through transmission from his mother. He was left in his grandfather's care when both his parents left the impoverished village to seek work. His mother left the family in 2006, while his father "lost contact" after Kunkun's condition was diagnosed.
Kunkun was referred to as a "time bomb" by villagers worried about being infected, while local children shunned him. His grandfather and guardian Luo Wenhui told the Beijing News Daily that when he signed the petition he "hoped that it would make things better," as the boy would receive improved care elsewhere.
"We are getting too old, and he is getting more naughty...we don't have the ability to look after him. If he didn't live better outside the village, he could come back." Luo said.
Luo, who is aged over 60, told the paper that he "did not have long to live" and that the petition was suggested by a local journalist as a way of drawing attention the his grandson's plight.
Talking to Beijing News, Kunkun said he could not remember what his parents looked like, adding:
"Other children don't play with me."
When asked if he would like to leave the village, the young innocent boy shook his head before running off to chase a nearby duck.
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