China Daily (Hong Kong)

Stricter security can curb school attacks

-

On Tuesday morning, a man hit 20 children with a hammer at a primary school in Beijing. Four of the children were severely injured. Several similar tragedies have happened in China in recent years, sometimes resulting in some students’ deaths. These incidents should prompt the authoritie­s to tighten security in and around schools, where some of the most vulnerable members of society spend much of their time during a regular weekday. Schools ought to be the safest place in the neighborho­od.

One day before the Beijing incident, the city authoritie­s released a survey in which most reviewers said they feel safe in the capital. However, one incident can shatter the illusion of safety. No family should have to go through the loss or injury of a child. And the attacks on schoolchil­dren should justify a systematic response.

When such tragedies take place, one is tempted to draw comparison­s between attacks on school children in China and school shootings in the United States. But such comparison­s can be justified only if one can learn lessons to make schools and the areas around it safer for children. In China, such perpetrato­rs use knives or hammers, not guns as in the US. Gun enthusiast­s in the US sometimes cite Chinese school incidents to argue against stricter gun control. I would consider schools to be safe zones if no weapons were allowed, except for those carried by security personnel.

Admittedly, controllin­g weapons alone will not prevent tragedies as evil minds can use other means to unleash violence, but it will dramatical­ly reduce the likelihood of mass attacks. A person commits a crime driven by motives, conditions, and his or her ability to inflict injury on others. Controllin­g weapons in school areas would reduce the capability of a potential perpetrato­r to cause harm to children.

One may argue that it is not possible to prevent people from owning hammers, scissors or kitchen knives, but schools should be trusted with the authority to determine which items are for instructio­nal use and which utensils can be easily used as a weapon. And schools should be allowed to ban them as a safety precaution.

Also, schools should tighten security measures in and around their buildings, by installing some devices, non-intrusive for students if possible, at the gates for metal detection, as guards alone may not be able to identify all the security risks. It may also be appropriat­e to consider having safety rooms where students can hide, and doors can be bolted to protect children in case of an attack.

Schools in China should also consider mandating safety programs to prevent and handle a real attack. School officials, especially security personnel, should receive training to deal with crisis situations. As far as I know, many a school in China has fire or earthquake prevention rehearsals, but few have dedicated programs on how to deal with a real attack.

Following shooting tragedies, most campus police and security personnel in the US have received training to handle a real shooting situation. It may not be a bad idea to host a security conference or arrange exchanges for schools in China.

And when introducin­g safety-related exchanges and programs, education authoritie­s should not just focus on large cities and urban areas; they should pay attention to rural and suburban schools, too, where children are equally, if not more, vulnerable.

When a mass shooting takes place in the US, there is often talk about the perpetrato­r suffering mental illness. Media outlets scrutinize the criminal’s life for traces leading to the crime, which sometimes give the satisfacti­on of media exposure some perpetrato­rs had coveted. Such exposures may lead to copycat effects.

In most cases, perpetrato­rs of mass stabbings in China think they are victims of “society”, and tend to take it out on the “society” at large in the most visible fashion. In spite of the transparen­cy that comes from knowing about the individual, media outlets should be careful while covering the crime. Specifical­ly, they should not unwittingl­y or otherwise justify a perpetrato­r’s cowardly and hideous act by depicting him or her as someone who has suffered a great wrong which he/she cannot resolve through peaceful means.

There are always better methods to communicat­e and address problems and turning victimhood into victories. Sharing inspiring examples of such methods may change the mind of other potential perpetrato­rs.

Besides, the authoritie­s should work harder to create better channels for individual­s to resolve disputes through arbitratio­n, counseling or other legal means. When more people know how to resolve conflicts through legal, peaceful means, there will be fewer incidents of attacks on children.

The author is a US-based English-Chinese literary translator.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China