AFP: Crime On Rise In China, But Public Kept In Dark As Serial Killers Strike
BEIJING, Nov 17 (AFP) - Once priding itself on its lower crime rates than
Western countries, China is witnessing a surge in violence -- including grisly
serial murders -- that analysts Monday blamed on ballooning social problems and
police failings. In a five-day period last week, police arrested an ex-convict for 65 killings, a
man suspected of strangling 25 high school students, and a couple for murdering
12 women. The murders highlight a rapidly changing Chinese society in which growing
economic inequalities coupled with loosened social restrictions are leading more
people to crime, observers said. Many criminals come from extremely poor backgrounds whose efforts to advance had
been blocked by government-imposed obstacles, Frank Lu, director of the Hong
Kong-based Information Center for Human Rights and Democracy said. "These people develop a deep hatred for society," said Lu. "Unless the
government addresses these social inequalities, violent crime will only
increase." Twenty years of economic reforms have been accompanied by mass poisonings,
bombings, revenge attacks and other violent crimes rarely seen in previous
decades. More troubling, analysts said, the recent murders reflect the fact that China's
police see no need to inform the public about serial killers. "This is shocking. Nobody knew about these crimes until after the police solved
the cases," said Lu. "This is exactly how the Chinese government dealt with SARS initially, which
caused it to spread," he said referring to the cover-up of the extent of the
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome virus in the early days of its outbreak in the
spring. Had police informed the public early about the mass murders, residents might
have been able to protect themselves and could have offered police tips, Lu
said. The killers may even have been intimidated by the media reports. "But none of this happened, and the killer was able to carry on killing people,"
he said. The man accused of 65 killings over a two-year period was only arrested by
chance during a routine inspection of entertainment venues. And police only began investigating the murder of the 25 high school students in
a rural community after the 26th would-be victim managed to escape. Traditionally, the Chinese government has been afraid to release information
that could generate public panic. Keeping people in the dark "has to do with fear of public perceptions about
police capabilities," said Du Xiongbai, a criminology professor at Xiangtan
University in central China's Hunan province. "The police in China believe that if they report the cases before they solve
them, it shows they are incompetent." Crime statistics are not fully revealed and wanted lists are never released.
Only solved cases appear on the numerous television programs about crime, which
tend to show officers in a good light. "The government wants to promote a sense of security," Du said. But such tactics may be having the opposite effect. "When these major cases are reported, the public wonders how many more cases
have not been solved," Du said. Criminologists and academics are increasingly calling for the government to be
more open about crime and crime statistics. "The government believes these figures cannot be revealed because they reflect
to some extent the social problems China is facing, such as the widening gap
between the rich and poor," Du said. "But without these statistics, how can we analyze why crime is going up?" Du partly blames rising crime on looser controls over state-run media.
Nonetheless, media have maintained a hands-off approach to the recent
mass-murder arrests, with the 65-murder case garnering fewer reports in the
Chinese media than the Green River murders in the US, in which 48 people died.
http://www.ptd.net/webnews/wed/cj/Qchina-crime.RtR4_DNH.html
Yearly Archive
Printer Version
feedback@clearwisdom.net