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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

China tightens school security

Move follows wave of attacks on children

A woman holding a baby stands near Zhongxin Kindergarten, where a class of 4-year-olds  was attacked  Thursday.  (Associated Press)
Tini Tran Associated Press

BEIJING – Armed police will patrol schools in China’s capital after a farmer attacked kindergarten students with a hammer, then burned himself to death Friday in the third classroom assault in as many days.

The government ordered schools across the country to tighten security, and anxious parents of students targeted in an earlier attack marched in protest Friday night, demanding a better government response to the crisis.

In the latest assault, Wang Yonglai used a motorcycle to break down the gate of the Shangzhuang Primary School in the city of Weifang and struck a teacher who tried to block him before hitting students with a hammer, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

Wang then grabbed two children, poured gasoline over his body, and set himself on fire. Teachers pulled the children to safety, but Wang died. None of the five injured students had life-threatening wounds, Xinhua said.

The attack was confirmed by an employee at the Weifang Public Security information office. Wang’s motive was unclear. Xinhua described him only as a farmer.

Chinese schools have had five such attacks in just over a month – unusual in a country where extreme violence is comparatively rare and strict controls keep most people from owning guns. Sociologists suspect the rampages – usually by lone, male attackers – could be copycat actions.

State media reports have largely shied away from why students have been targets. Experts say outbursts against defenseless children can be due to social pressures in a rapidly changing society.

The attacks have been particularly shocking because most urban families in China have only one child due to government population control policies.

“Children are the ones people care about the most, and they are the most innocent,” said Ma Ai, a sociology professor at the China University of Political Sciences and Law in Beijing.

Targeting children is “beyond the bottom line of human morals,” he said.

State media either ignored or played down Friday’s attack. It wasn’t mentioned on the evening news in the eastern province of Shandong, where it occurred, and Xinhua didn’t release a Chinese-language story on its website. Experts have worried openly about copycats, but authorities may also have wanted to avoid overshadowing Friday’s opening of the World Expo in Shanghai, a pet government project.

On Wednesday, a 33-year-old former teacher broke into a primary school in the southern city of Leizhou and wounded 15 students and a teacher with a knife. The attacker had been on sick leave from another school since 2006 for mental health problems.

At a school in the eastern city of Taixing on Thursday, a 47-year-old unemployed man armed with an 8-inch (20-centimeter) knife wounded 29 students aged 4 or 5 – five of them seriously – plus two teachers and a security guard.

A group of parents marched Friday night outside the Taixing People’s Hospital, demanding a better government response and proper care for their children.

The government on Friday issued an urgent directive to schools to tighten security. In the capital, the Beijing Education Commission ordered armed tactical police to begin patrolling around nursery, primary and secondary schools starting Tuesday, the first day back to school after the May Day holiday. Police will be on site when classes begin and end.