Put it on a paper plate with a child's urine at a famous restaurant...Is it a public restroom? Public anger

Nov 10, 2025

Put it on a paper plate with a child's urine at a famous restaurant...Is it a public restroom? Public anger
photo source=TheWine, The Standard



A woman who placed a paper bowl containing a child's urine on a mobile plate at a famous Chinese restaurant is getting angry.

According to The Standard and other foreign media, a mother recently received her child's urine in a paper bowl and placed it on a food cart next to the table at a famous hot pot chain 'Haidilao' in Harbin, China.

According to one witness, when the child suddenly shouted "I want to pee" during the meal, the mother took out a paper bowl, took the child's urine and placed it on the food tray, and then wiped the floor with a tissue.




This spread the smell of urine around and an unpleasant witness complained to the restaurant.

But as a reward, I was provided with only one fruit plate.

He "The child peed right across the street, and the smell kept coming. We didn't even eat fruit" expressed a strong dissatisfaction.




The next day, Haidirao issued an official statement, saying it had carried out a thorough cleaning within 15 minutes of the incident and had disposed of all contaminated items. It also added that employees were deployed to receive and resolve complaints from affected customers.

The incident spread quickly online, and criticism intensified.

On Chinese SNS, such as Weibo, "Haidirao became a public toilet?", "Now eating hot pot is psychological trauma." was followed by a response, "As in the last urine case, we have to file a lawsuit for damages again this time."There was also a claim that ".




Earlier this year, a case in which teenagers urinated in a hot pot at a Haidilao branch in Shanghai caused national anger. At the time, Haidirao disposed of all the cutlery, disinfected the restaurant thoroughly, and gave a full refund and 10-fold compensation to about 4,100 customers. In a subsequent lawsuit for damages, the court ruled that the youths and their parents should be paid 2.2 million yuan (450 million won).



This article was translated by Naver AI translator.