Thursday, May 29, 2008

China: Grieving Parents Criticize Government Officials

Here is a follow-up to a recent post about the numerous school buildings that collapsed in the Chinese earthquake.

The parents of the schoolchildren who died in the disaster are now voicing their grief and rage. Blurb:

DUJIANGYAN, China — Bereaved parents whose children were crushed to death in their classrooms during the earthquake in Sichuan Province have turned mourning ceremonies into protests in recent days, forcing officials to address growing political repercussions over shoddy construction of public schools.

Parents of the estimated 10,000 children who lost their lives in the quake have grown so enraged about collapsed schools that they have overcome their usual caution about confronting Communist Party officials. Many say they are especially upset that some schools for poor students crumbled into rubble even though government offices and more elite schools not far away survived the May 12 quake largely intact.

. . . The protests threaten to undermine the government’s attempts to promote its response to the quake as effective and to highlight heroic rescue efforts by the People’s Liberation Army, which has dispatched 150,000 soldiers to the region. Censors have blocked detailed reporting of the schools controversy by the state-run media . . .

Consider too how much worse this is emotionally, given China's one-child-only policy.

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