Girl gets run over twice and no one cared

Re: Girl gets run over twice and no one cared

Lets count the number of days till some poor mother and daughter does a fake replica of this event.

In devastation there is opportunity.
 
Re: Girl gets run over twice and no one cared

Hopeless society.....Its a shame to mankind.....
 
Re: Girl gets run over twice and no one cared

If Hitmee accidentally fell into Singpore river, I jump into river & save him. He can sue me for pushing him down, if not why risk to save him.
 
Re: Girl gets run over twice and no one cared

RIP.........





cheers
 
Re: Girl gets run over twice and no one cared

Good article that sums up China's society flaws.

CHINA SEARCHES SOUL AS HIT-AND-RUN CHILD DIES (FT REPORT)

A toddler who was gravely injured in a hit-and-run accident in China last week died on Friday, the tragic conclusion to an incident that sparked an emotional outcry about the country’s declining moral values.

Video footage of the accident showed 18 passers-by ignoring the two year-old, named Yueyue, after she was struck by a van in a market in southern Guangdong province. The driver of the van stopped briefly but did not get out and then drove off. Only after Yueyue was run over by a second vehicle, which also continued on its way, did a Samaritan rush to her aid.

Chinese bloggers said the incident illustrated a sick society’s obsession with money and a widespread unwillingness to help strangers. “We cannot afford property, we cannot afford grave sites, we cannot offend officials, we cannot help the elderly. We cannot save a girl who was run over,” one wrote in a typically irate posting. “It’s amazing we are still alive.”

Wang Yang, Guangdong party secretary and the province’s most powerful politician, said at a government meeting on Thursday: “everyone should use the knife of conscience to dissect the ugliness in themselves”.

Instances of people being successfully sued in China after trying to help elderly people who fell in the street have made many wary of helping strangers. Some academics argue that the ministry of health compounded the problem by issuing “technical guidelines” last month that instructed people on how to help injured elderly.

“People are using the guidance as an excuse not to help,” said Tan Fang, a professor at Southern China Normal University who launched a “Good Man Defence Fund” this year to help people sued after trying to help strangers.

“We have had cases where elderly people died because they were not helped,” Mr Tan said. “We have not seen cases where people died because they were helped in the wrong way.”

In subsequent meetings with experts including Mr Tan, provincial officials said that they were considering a new law that would prosecute people who ignored accident victims.

Local media reports said some of the people who looked the other way as Yueyue lay injured said they did not realise she had been badly hurt. Others said they were afraid to help because she was bleeding profusely.

The person who did eventually come to the girl’s plight was Chen Xianmei, an indigent 58-year-old cook who supplemented her income by collecting garbage in the area. “What I did is only what one would usually do,” Ms Chen told the Guangzhou Daily newspaper.

Illustrating the government’s sensitivity to stories that take the internet by storm, a Guangdong vice governor visited Yueyue in hospital this week. Ms Chen has also been offered a Rmb20,000 ($3,133) government reward.

A one-year-old boy was hit by a car in a similar incident on Wednesday in a market not far from where Yueyue was lethally injured. Dozens of shopowners looked for the child’s mother while the driver rushed the toddler to hospital, where he was treated for a fracture.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Re: Girl gets run over twice and no one cared

China soul-searching after toddler's death - CNN.com

........................................

Why is it so difficult for Chinese nowadays to be a Good Samaritan? There are many possible explanations and many possible culprits.

Some blame it on the lack of laws and regulations. Others argue it's caused by the failure of China's education system to inculcate respect for human life and dignity.

Still others blame it on what some call "jingshen kongxu", or spiritual vacuum. As the country's 1.3 billion people compete to make money and climb the economic and social ladder, experts say, many people find themselves spiritually adrift.

Reynard Hing, an astute China-watcher, cautions against making sweeping conclusions. "It's funny how many people read into this, to the point that anti-Chinese sentiment arises," he wrote me. "This situation is not unique to China."

He cites the case of Kitty Genovese. In 1964, the woman in Queens, N.Y. was chased and stabbed to death by an assailant over the course of half an hour while 38 of her neighbors watched from their windows and did nothing to help.

Psychologists, Hing tells me, have dubbed this phenomenon the 'bystander problem'—the one factor that would predict Good Samaritan behavior was how many witnesses there were to a tragic event: The more bystanders, the less likely someone will step up to help.

I asked Xia Xueluan, a socio-psychology professor at Peking University, about the seeming callousness of the 18 passersby. One factor is the district where it occurred, which has a concentration of hardware stores like the one Yueyue's father owns. "(They) are owners of hardware stores originally from different parts of China who hardly know each other. Together they comprise a 'strangers' society', instead of one made up of real friends and acquaintances, or the "acquaintances' society'."

Xia said the two sub-groups are fundamentally different. "In an 'acquaintances' society'," he explained, "their relationship is of intimacy, trust and interdependence. In the 'strangers' society' it is characterized by estrangement, distrust, and independence. In such a society, it is not surprising to see incidents like this."

James Feinerman, a law professor at Georgetown University likewise cites the changes brought about by rapid urbanization. "In big cities, where many people have moved in from outside, where there are thousands of newcomers from the provinces, there's a feeling that you are better off just leaving people you don't know alone," he said in a CNN interview.

Other observers blame the incident on a breakdown in public trust. A joint survey by three universities in Beijing revealed that the root cause of people's reluctance to help others in need is a lack of trust among residents. Only about 8% surveyed said they still strongly trust other people.

Should an elderly person in need be helped? Over 60% of the respondents said "yes", but more than 84% also believed it is too risky; recently in China, there have been several cases of individuals who faked injuries only to sue those who come to their aid.

In 2006, an old woman in the eastern city of Nanjing was injured after rough jostling at a bus stop. Peng Yu, a young man and fellow passenger, offered help and even took her to the hospital. Later, however, the old woman and her family sued him in court, which eventually ruled that Peng Yu should pay 40% of the medical costs.

Similar cases have happened in recent years.

"There must be something wrong when it is considered risky to be a Good Samaritan," China Daily wrote in an editorial this week. "Apathy and distrust are the last things a harmonious society needs. It is imperative that we find a way to protect Good Samaritans from being wronged."

Peking University's Xia Xueluan calls this the "interpersonal trust crisis". He explains: "This kind of crisis is highly contagious and could deteriorate due to lack of legal support. As a netizen puts it, it's not that the good people can no longer be found in our society. It's that nobody can afford to do good deeds—the price can be too high."

Days after Yueyue's tragic accident, millions of China's micro-bloggers are still pouring out their anger and frustration.

"After Peng Yu's case, if you were the first to find Yueyue after the accident, would you rescue her?" Netizen Yi Jingge wrote.

That is a question many in China are now asking themselves.
 
Re: Girl gets run over twice and no one cared

Yesterday I saw a guy kenna hit by a car. i passed by opposite & saw the body lying head down in front the car, the friends & driver were arguing, seems like no one attend to the victim, leaving the poor guy lying there motionless & obstructed the whole road... the truck cannot even pass through as the accident vehicle stopped in the middle of a 2 lane road...
 
Re: Girl gets run over twice and no one cared

Was this in Singapore?

Why didnt the driver and friend attended the victim first?
no passer by stopped to give an helping hand?
 
Re: Girl gets run over twice and no one cared

kenntona;695113 said:
China soul-searching after toddler's death - CNN.com

........................................

Why is it so difficult for Chinese nowadays to be a Good Samaritan? There are many possible explanations and many possible culprits.
.


Singapore is no different.

How many people is really willing to stand up to be a whistle blower?

My wife always complain why I am so Kay Po.
 
Re: Girl gets run over twice and no one cared

Ours would be Hit and Run charges, negligent driving, and maybe illegal tinting if TP very free and finds it too dark
 
Re: Girl gets run over twice and no one cared

golilok;888477 said:
Not that I understand how the Law works
But will the charges be very much different let's say in SG?

The most worrying and thought-consuming issue is the decaying moral code.. what is right and what is wrong. sigh.
 
Re: Girl gets run over twice and no one cared

forbidden fruit tastes better.

Does it matter if she's 15.9, for as long as its between two willing parties?

Does it matter if she's 15.9, for she has the maturity to win over adults three times her age?
 

Members online

No members online now.

Forum statistics

Threads
82,724
Messages
1,019,222
Members
71,496
Latest member
7mcnads
Ad | 📈Learn Trading Strategies, Lessons and Setups
Back
Top