Why was little Yue Yue ignored?

The plight of the two-year-old girl, nicknamed Yue Yue, captured the public imagination after surveillance camera footage showed her being knocked down first by a van and then several minutes later by a small truck.

At least 18 people were shown walking past the girl as she lay in the street critically injured, before a female rubbish collector finally picked her up and moved her to the curb.

Several passers-by can be seen stopping to look down at the girl before carrying on, and their failure to help her has triggered speculation the country's rapid development and urbanization has made people more selfish.

Millions of Chinese went online to watch the grainy footage of the incident, which took place on October 13 in a narrow market street in the southern Chinese city of Foshan.

A YouTube screengrab of the Chinese two-year-old girl, nicknamed Yue Yue, bleeding and unconscious on the street after being hit by two vehicles.

But there has also been much soul-searching about why both the drivers who hit Yue Yue and the passers-by in China's wealthiest province, Guangdong, chose to leave her for dead rather than stop and help.

"The little girl's destiny made us ashamed because she left this world painfully due to our indifference and neglect,"

posted one commentator online after the hospital treating Yue Yue said she had died.

A commentary in Friday's Global Times daily said the incident had exposed the "dark side" of Chinese society.

"The Yue Yue incident reminds us of where China is standing on the ladder of its moral development,"

it said.

"This is what happens in a modern society when many decisions are shaped at a fast pace."

A senior official in Guangdong said the tragedy should be a "wake-up call" for society.

"We should look into the ugliness in ourselves with a dagger of conscience and bite the soul-searching bullet,"

said Wang Yang at a provincial meeting, according to China's official Xinhua news agency.

Some commentators speculated that the failure to help Yue Yue was motivated by fear of being blamed for her injuries after a high-profile 2006 case in which a driver who stopped to help an elderly woman was later prosecuted.

Peng Yu, then 26, said he stopped after seeing the woman fall in the eastern city of Nanjing, but she accused him of knocking her down with his car, and a court later ordered him to pay her 45,000 yuan (US$7,000) in damages.

"The judge in Peng Yu's case in Nanjing has destroyed the kindness of a whole nation and it is difficult to recover,"

wrote one weibo user on Friday.

One sociologist told the Guangdong Daily that many Chinese today do not know how to act in such situations.

"People will rationalize and think, if I try to save her but she dies because I can't, how will that make me responsible?"

said Fudan University's Gu Xiaoming.

Police in Foshan said the drivers of both vehicles that hit the young girl had been detained and would face trial.

Would the people have acted differently if they knew the camera was on them?

Source AFP



Comments:

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters (without spaces) shown in the image.
 

Register Today

Registration is FREE. Registered Members get their own personal profile pages, blog pages, photogalleries, access to advanced community features, and much more.

Become a registered Asiance Member today!

User login

Asiance Magazine


ASIANCE, LLC
PO Box 4191 New York, NY 10163


Copyright 2010 AsianceMagazine.com · Terms · Privacy · All Rights Reserved.