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Old 17-10-11, 05:36 PM
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Default Toddler left dying after hit and run prompts soul searching in China

Toddler left dying after hit and run prompts soul searching in China | World news | The Guardian

Quote:
The van driver stops for a moment, presumably realising in horror that he has just hit a toddler. Then he drives on – crushing her again beneath his rear wheels.

What follows is arguably even more horrifying: a dozen passersby ignore two-year-old Yueyue as she lies in agony in a busy market in southern China. Several glance at her bloodied body before continuing, while others walk or wheel around it.

Their apparent indifference means that she is hit again, by a truck. Surveillance camera footage from the busy wholesale market in Foshan, Guangdong, shows that it takes seven minutes before a woman finally stops to help.

The young girl's fate has prompted horrified soul searching in China since the images were aired on a local television station. The footage has been watched more than 1.5m times on the popular Youku video sharing site.

Shanghai Daily reported that the little girl had died of her injuries in hospital after the collision on Thursday, but other state media including the news agency Xinhua said she remained in a deep coma.

A doctor surnamed Peng told China Daily that medics had declared her braindead on Sunday and she could die at any time. He said at best she would remain in a vegetative state on life support.

The widespread reluctance to help strangers has already lead to an anguished public debate in the country. Many say they are too scared, blaming extortion attempts by people who have accused Good Samaritans of causing their injuries – and judges who have backed such claims. But some talked of a new moral low after seeing passersby – including a woman holding a small girl by the hand – walk around a two-year-old lying in a pool of blood.

China Daily claimed that the woman who stopped, a rubbish collector, was even told by shopkeepers to mind her own business when she tried to find out the child's identity.

Many internet users expressed fury, describing those who ignored Yueyue as less than human. "Where did conscience go … What has happened to the Chinese people?" wrote one, Reissent1987.

Several pointed out that it was a rubbish collector – among the poorest and often worst-educated members of society – who stopped to help, while others carried on.

But some said that people should ask themselves how willing they would have been to help before criticising.

One said that while the footage was heartbreaking he would have been "numb" to Yueyue too. "Would you be willing to throw your entire family's savings into the endless whirlpool of accident compensation? Aren't you afraid of being put into jail as the perpetrator? Have you ever considered that your whole family could lose happiness only because you wanted to be a great soul?" he wrote.

Chinese media said the two drivers who had hit Yueyue were now in police custody.
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Old 23-10-11, 10:52 AM
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Has China lost its humanity? - Asia, World - The Independent

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A little girl left bleeding to death on the side of the street after being struck by two goods vehicles, while 18 people passed her by and did nothing to help her.


A woman, six months pregnant, who died during a forced abortion to meet the terms of the one child policy of population control. These two incidents this week have left many people in China wondering aloud if rampant economic growth has come at the cost of the country's humanity. Is China becoming more dehumanised as incomes increase?

On the social networks, the talk is collective responsibility for the scandals. "We are all passers-by," one recently posted message read. The question is how this message of civic responsibility will go down with a generation reared on the principle that "to get rich is glorious".

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CCTV footage from a market street in the southern city of Foshan shows 18 pedestrians and cyclists ignoring two-year-old Wang Yue, nicknamed Yue Yue, as she lay bleeding to death on the pavement after being struck by two vans. Despite several furtive glances, nobody stopped to help. The 19th passer-by, a lowly migrant worker collecting rubbish, pulled her to the side of the street and alerted the toddler's mother.

Yue Yue succumbed to her terrible wounds yesterday, after a week in hospital in Guangzhou, and within hours there were more than 1.9 million posts on a Chinese version of the Twitter social network, Sina Weibo, many of them asking: where was the humanity in all of this? The response here has been profound – similar to the soul-searching in Britain that followed the kidnapping, torture and murder in 1993 of the toddler James Bulger by two young boys in Merseyside.

"We can't ask others to be clean if we don't take a bath ourselves. And it's ridiculous to ask others to be moral if we always do immoral things," wrote another Weibo user. The overriding suspicion here is that those who to do try to help, out of a sense of public-spiritedness, face the possibility of being accused of complicity in the initial incident. "The reason so many people did not help [Yue Yue] is not because they didn't want to, but because they didn't dare to. It's just like the way no one helps elderly people who fall down. The rubbish collector is poor, she has nothing but her conscience, while others are afraid to lose what they have to extortion," ran one comment on Weibo.

Those helping injured people on the street do risk being landed with the costs of the hospital treatment or, in some cases, accused of being the cause of the accident. In Jiangsu province this week, bus driver Peng Yu helped an elderly woman who had fallen from his bus. Despite his efforts, he was blamed for causing her fall and had to pay nearly 46,000 yuan (£4,600) in compensation.

Tan Fang, the founder of chinahaoren.com, a website that aims to encourage greater civic responsibility, said: "On the surface, this looks like the indifference of 18 people, but it reflects deeper social problems. With rapid economic development in the past 30 years, China has promoted materialism, but spiritual civilisation goes beyond this, especially moral education.

"As early as 1989, [former leader] Deng Xiaoping pointed out how we need to develop education and build a moral code. But people misunderstood him, and just built schools and facilities. The poor and weak in society long for fairness and warmth, kindness. On the other hand, some rich people in society became rich by improper or illegal means and became rich quickly, their values are twisted and they feel they don't need morality.

"Therefore some people with no beliefs and a twisted value system can do terrible, unimaginable things. The case of Yue Yue is a tragedy rarely seen in China's history, but it is no accident. Everyone in society needs to own up to responsibility, every local government official, and every individual. It is very important to let people see that good people do well and bad people are punished, and the way to show this is by cracking down on corruption and other injustices."

Wang Yang, a top Communist Party official from the booming province of Guangdong, China's economic engine and the province where Foshan is located, told a high-level provincial meeting the tragedy should be a "wake-up call" for society and that such incidents should not be allowed to occur again. "We should look into the ugliness in ourselves with a dagger of conscience and bite the soul-searching bullet,"the Xinhua news agency quoted him as saying.

The Party recognises that there is a spiritual void emerging from its materialist approach – after all this is a Marxist-Leninist organisation with materialism at its theoretical core. The government has introduced a number of efforts to try to encourage greater social responsibility, usually by hijacking some principles from Confucianism. The focus has been on creating a "harmonious society". However, many are fundamentally unwilling to take advice from the government and there are those who believe the Party's obsession with economic growth is to blame in creating a human vacuum at the heart of society.

The week's events have also highlighted the tension between the idea of a society of individuals and the masses. As China becomes wealthier, people want to have a greater say in their individual destinies. But there is little room for individual self-determination in a society where all families, regardless of the circumstances, are forced to bow down to the one child policy. There has been a large outcry in China this week about a woman, already the mother of one child, who died in Shandong province during a forced abortion. She was six months pregnant, and her family posted gruesome photographs of her lying dead on a trolley in a treatment room.

Under the regulations for implementing state family planning laws, local officials can lose their annual bonuses and be ruled out for promotion if anyone breaches the policy, putting pressure on functionaries to follow the letter of the law. There is recognition in China of the need for population control, but it is the inhumane way the law is implemented that has angered people.

The outpouring of horror over the indifference shown to the lives of the pregnant woman – her only crime being her wish for a second child and a larger family – and for Yue Yue as she lay bleeding on the street, has been matched by recognition that being a Good Samaritan in China is not without complications. Online polls show that most believed people should be protected for doing good works, but baulked at plans to make "Good Samaritan" acts mandatory. "It's not right to confuse moral and legal issues anyway," wrote internet user Xiaomei. "I think few people would risk being a Good Samaritan unless their own rights were protected by the law in the first place."

China's household incomes are set to double in coming years as it replaces Japan as the world's second-wealthiest country,behind the United States, with total income expected to shoot to £25.4trillion by 2016, a Credit Suisse report shows.

What is clear is that the accumulation of fortune will be accompanied with a vastly expanding wealth gap in China where the Gini coefficient, a commonly used measure of inequality of wealth, has already widened massively. Others blame the events on rapid urbanisation, which takes people out of communities and into cities where they become anonymous.

The public outcry shows people are aware of the dehumanisation process. The passers-by and drivers who ignored Yue Yue have been sharply criticised, and there is a growing groundswell of support for "Good Samaritans".

Donations flooded in for Yue Yue's medical treatment, alas in vain. Maybe next time, passers-by will slow down to help a dying child.
This is amazing. These guys are like the Westboro Baptists, except that for them the root of all evil isn't gays, it's consumerism. Any time anything bad happens ever: "tsk tsk, Western materialism".

*walks off shaking head*
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Old 24-10-11, 07:26 PM
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Lady Who Helped Little Girl Run Over by Van Rewarded 25K – chinaSMACK

Lady Who Helped Little Girl Run Over by Van Rewarded 25K
by Joe on Sunday, October 23, 2011 125 comments
This is an update to our previous translated report of a 2-year-old little Chinese girl who was ran over by a van and then ignored by 18 bystanders…

From NetEase:

Driver of the case where a little girl was ran over has been arrested
Summary: October 13th, at the Guangfo Hardware Market in Huangqi of Foshan. A van ran over a 2-year-old little girl twice in a small alley, a few minutes later a small truck again ran over her. Over the span of 7 minutes, over a dozen people passed by, and not one extended a helping hand. Finally, a garbage scavenger ayi [older woman] helped up the girl. The night of the 16th, both drivers responsible had been caught.

From NetEase:

Ayi who rescued child rewarded with 25,000 yuan, says will give it to the little girl who was ran over
Summary: Chen Xianmei, the Guangdong Foshan ayi who saved [the little girl] received from various departments over 25,000 RMB. She stated that she will give the money to little Yue Yue. Of the 18 “cold hearted” passersby, 3 have revealed themselves and two of them said they didn’t see the child, while the other expressed remorse and guilt. In addition, the diver responsible for hurting little Yue Yue also expressed regret and felt he let down the child’s family.

From NetEase:

Ayi who saved little girl besieged by media, says she doesn’t want to become famous
The garbage scavenging ayi Chen Xianmei who saved the 2-year-old led has recently attracted the attention of the entire nation’s media, as well as the appreciation of Foshan, Guangzhou’s various government bureaus. Hundreds of domestic and foreign media rushed here to report on her. Her phone became a hotline, but she repeatedly said she does not want to be famous, and that her and her family’s lives have already been affected by the “assault” from the media.
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Old 10-11-11, 09:27 AM
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Why this happened: Man Who Saved Woman From Rape Accused of Being a Peeping Tom – chinaSMACK
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