Four Chinese siblings commit suicide
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This is so sad..
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2015/06/15/the-heartbreaking-reason-four-chinese-siblings-drank-poison-and-died/?tid=hybrid_experimentrandom_1_na
:(
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2015/06/15/the-heartbreaking-reason-four-chinese-siblings-drank-poison-and-died/?tid=hybrid_experimentrandom_1_na
They left behind more than a broken marriage, however. Cooped up inside the dusty house were four children, ages 5 to 13. Without their parents, the four siblings would have to fend for themselves.
They didn’t last long.
For two years, the boy and his three younger sisters survived on little more than corn flour, according to one Chinese newspaper. Abandoned by their parents, the children’s personalities changed. They shut themselves inside the cluttered house and refused to open the door even to visiting relatives, the New York Times reported. About a month ago, the kids stopped going to school.
When the doors finally did open on Tuesday, tragedy came tumbling out.
At about 11 p.m., a passerby found the oldest child sprawled out in front of the family’s house, suffering convulsions, according to Agence France-Presse. Neighbors soon found the other three siblings in similar conditions nearby. All four eventually died.
The four children drank pesticide in an apparent suicide pact, Chinese state media reported.
China has about 250 million migrant workers, most of whom are drawn from rural villages like Cizhu to mega cities where they can find manufacturing jobs, William Wan wrote in The Washington Post in 2013. Strict government rules and a shortage of schools in big cities mean that many parents leave their kids with grandparents or on their own.
There are roughly 61 million of these “left-behind children,” according to a 2010 China census. More than a third of all kids in rural China live without their parents. Nationwide, nearly 22 percent of Chinese kids have been left behind.
:(
The actual "left-behind" rate is even higher than that, a lot of these children are often taken care of by their grandparents or older siblings and ofter do not receive enough education. The massive exodus of work force and relatively higher birth rate from agriculture-centric areas since the 90s meant this kind of population rift is bound to happen.
Disclaimer: I am Chinese and was born and raised in the countryside.
Disclaimer: I am Chinese and was born and raised in the countryside.
jesus christ it's too early in the morning for this
By digmouse Go To PostThe actual "left-behind" rate is even higher than that, a lot of these children are often taken care of by their grandparents or older siblings and ofter do not receive enough education. The massive exodus of work force and relatively higher birth rate from agriculture-centric areas since the 90s meant this kind of population rift is bound to happen.is the government or whatever is trying to do ANYTHING about this?
Disclaimer: I am Chinese and was born and raised in the countryside.
By Yurt Go To Postjesus christ it's too early in the morning for thisThey can't even if they want to, there are efforts about it but the results are slim, you can't really accelerate urbanization fast enough to compensate the population exodus due to the massive economics difference between China's countryside and cities. The deeper you are into China, bigger the econ rifts are.
is the government or whatever is trying to do ANYTHING about this?
If you do not leave to find opportunities in the cities, you stay poor that way and no one wants that. The only chance of improving their life is leave their children and elders behind, there is no other way for the majority of people there.
This issue is definitely not a new phenomena. Although it is about 6 years old, there is a film that highlights this issue pretty well with parents leaving behind their children in the country to become migrant workers to support their family.
Last Train Home (歸途列車)
I watched it in my political science courses and it is an in depth documentary on how migrant workers from rural towns have had a detrimental effect on families, especially ones who are experiencing extreme culture shifts with the rapid urbanizations and industrialization.
Much has change since 2009 but I thought it is a good starting point in understanding the issue.
I find its effects devastating while I study and compare it to Japan's own rural-urban population shift. The circumstances are very different despite coming from somewhat similar backgrounds in technological and economical growth.
You can see similar, lesser effects in other countries like Thailand. I believe Taiwan and Korea have faced something similar but I have not researched enough to give a good comparison.
Last Train Home (歸途列車)
I watched it in my political science courses and it is an in depth documentary on how migrant workers from rural towns have had a detrimental effect on families, especially ones who are experiencing extreme culture shifts with the rapid urbanizations and industrialization.
Much has change since 2009 but I thought it is a good starting point in understanding the issue.
I find its effects devastating while I study and compare it to Japan's own rural-urban population shift. The circumstances are very different despite coming from somewhat similar backgrounds in technological and economical growth.
You can see similar, lesser effects in other countries like Thailand. I believe Taiwan and Korea have faced something similar but I have not researched enough to give a good comparison.