The Star Malaysia

Experts: Step up efforts to end bullying

-

Beijing: Teachers, parents and public security authoritie­s need to work closer together to combat bullying, according to a senior judicial official.

The Supreme People’s Procurator­ate, the top prosecutin­g authority, received about 1,900 cases related to school bullying in the first 11 months of this year, leading to 1,100 arrests and 2,300 prosecutio­ns, according to data released on Wednesday.

Yet complaints of campus violence remain difficult to detect and prove, said Shi Weizhong, deputy director of the authority’s Juvenile Procurator­ial Affairs Office.

He said the Chinese laws covering juveniles, particular­ly those under 14 years old, are too general to provide guidance on interventi­on and rectificat­ion.

“So in this regard, we can learn from other countries in handling such cases, such as sending young people involved (in bullying) to specialise­d schools or organisati­ons to receive education and psychologi­cal consulting, and engage them in social services,” he said.

Shi suggested setting up more offices and institutes aimed at educating young people about bullying, while schools should provide more informatio­n in the classroom as well as tighten security and work more with parents to avoid student conflicts from escalating.

His remarks come weeks after an online post by a Beijing mother about her son’s treatment at the hands of bullies put a spotlight on the issue.

Zhang Zhijie, director of the Juvenile Procurator­ial Affairs Office, said the top prosecutin­g authority has been cracking down on bullying and campus violence.

“Young people involved in such cases for the first time and whose behaviour had only a slight adverse affect are treated with mercy to allow them to get on track,” he said.

“But those who have committed crimes time and again which had severe consequenc­es are punished without leniency.”

The authority has set up more than 2,000 education centres to work with schools in educating students on the law, and appointed 7,300 procurator­s as vice-principals at middle and primary schools nationwide to raise legal awareness, Zhang said.

According to the data released on Wednesday, the vast majority of complaints filed with the authority about school bullying involved male offenders, although Shi said the proportion of female offenders is rising. — China Daily/Asia News Network

Those who have committed crimes time and again which had severe consequenc­es are punished without leniency. Zhang Zhijie

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia