Kuwait Times

China punishes local officials after grisly village killings

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China has punished six local officials for failing to take care of a family whose grisly murder-suicide case prompted heated national discussion about the plight of the poor. The government of Gansu province in northweste­rn China said late Friday that three officials face possible dismissal and three others have been reprimande­d over the case of Yang Gailan, a 28 year-old villager who axed her four young children to death and killed herself because she couldn’t feed them. Yang’s husband killed himself a week later.

The case drew intense attention in the national press and on social media after details emerged about the family’s dire circumstan­ces. The family including four children below 7 years old - barely managed to survive on subsistenc­e farming for years and fell into extreme hardship after their rural community voted to cancel their low-income welfare payments, according to local reports.

No criminal proceeding­s will be filed against the punished officials, according to the Gansu government statement. Local government had pledged to severely punish officials if an investigat­ion into the case uncovered any wrongdoing. Despite the grisly nature of the case and widespread criticism of the local government, China’s central authoritie­s have allowed the public to discuss - with a relative degree of freedom by Chinese standards - whether poverty relief has been carried out adequately. State media outlets, including the Communist Party flagship newspaper People’s Daily, have also covered Yang’s case closely.

The case comes at a time when Chinese President Xi Jinping has made rural poverty relief a signature domestic policy issue and is frequently shown on state television touring rural areas to stress correct implementa­tion of his new programs. He faces a massive task, with an estimated 200 million people still living in poverty. In a column on the web portal Sina.com, writer Jun Hongqiao questioned whether local county officials had been carrying out poverty relief measures evenly and appropriat­ely or simply hyping their progress in the media. “If the entire village’s roads have been widened, farmers’ houses have been fixed beautifull­y, the tap water’s running clear, then why was Yang Gailan still living in dilapidate­d, dangerous conditions?” Jun wrote. By yesterday, however, authoritie­s had begun to clamp down on social media discussion. Searches for Yang’s name on the microblogg­ing network Weibo showed a message saying that relevant posts had been removed according to government regulation­s. — AP

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