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Mass casualty attacks in China put focus on mental health

International experts on Tuesday urged China to help citizens deal with the stress of slowing economy and related mental health issues in the wake of increasing mass killings.

The repercussions on mental health from such economic pressures are growing, experts say.

Two high-profile mass killings and a car crash at a primary school in just over a week are raising questions about how well-equipped China is to deal with the stresses.

Since Nov. 11, China has reeled under news of a driver reportedly angry at his divorce settlement killing 35 people by ramming his car into a crowd in Zhuhai.

A former student on a stabbing rampage at a vocational college in Wuxi killing eight; and a car ploughing into a crowd of school children and pedestrians in the city of Changde on Tuesday.

In the Changde case, it was not clear if the incident was caused deliberately.

However, police said they had arrested the driver and investigations were in progress.

The events have led to a spike in worries about the overall health of society in China, where mass casualty attacks have occurred with alarming regularity throughout 2024.

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In the Zhuhai and Wuxi cases, brief statements made public by police about the suspects indicated these attacks were perpetrated by men lashing out against unrelated bystanders after suffering an economic loss.

As the economy slows, employment opportunities are more precarious and fewer people are being lifted up by China’s long-running economic miracle.

George Magnus, associate at Oxford University’s China Centre said the spate of mass casualty incidents in China “speak to a pattern, rather than an aberration.”

Research by the Washington-based Centre for Strategic and International Studies in July identified a widespread perception in China that lack of success was attributable to unfairness and systemic causes.

“I think this goes a long way in explaining the social and industrial malaise evident in the spate of incidents, and sends out warning signals about the state of society,” Magnus said.

Xiaojie Qin, a Beijing-based psychotherapist and director at mental health non-profit CandleX, said that a pervasive sense of societal unfairness and disparity could lead in extreme cases to violence against random bystanders.

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“Some people who were left behind and socially and economically more marginalised can feel they are not being treated (changed from traded) fairly and some people who don’t have enough emotional regulation, they have outbursts, sometimes violent outbursts,” she said.

China’s official crime statistics show that its rates of violent crime are much lower than global averages.

However, the recent spate of incidents have raised questions about public safety in China, where citizens have long been proud of streets safe from violence. (www.nannews.ng) (Reuters/NAN)

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