The
incident was captured on surveillance cameras
Related
Stories
A Chinese
province is debating the introduction of a law to force people to help others
in obvious distress.
It comes
after a two-year-old girl was left for dead after being run over by a van - and
then ignored by 18 passers-by.
She is
currently in hospital fighting for her life.
The law
might never be enacted - but even discussing such a measure shows the level of
anger generated in China by this case.
The fallout
from this incident, which happened in the city of Foshan in southern Guangdong
Province, continues.
'Promoting
morals'
Provincial
groups from the ruling Communist Party, government departments and associations
are talking about a new law.
This could
make it illegal for people to ignore those in need of help.
"Many
laws, including forbidding drunken driving, in China have been passed after
high-profile individual cases," said lawyer Zhu Yongping, according to a
report in the English-language China Daily.
Other media
outlets report that the introduction of a law will be debated at a meeting of
lawyers next month.
Initial
online polls, though, suggest most people are against it.
"Talk
about being civilised first. Is anyone paying attention to that?" read one
posting.
Organisations
in Guangdong are also looking at other ways to encourage people to act with
compassion when faced with an emergency.
The
provincial government's political and legal affairs committee is using its
micro-blog site to gather opinions about how to "guide brave acts for just
causes" and promote "socialist morals".
This debate
has been sparked by an accident last week involving the toddler Wang Yue.
She was
knocked down by a van while wandering through a market, where her parents run a
shop. The driver sped off without checking on the girl's condition.
Over the
following minutes, 18 people went past the bleeding toddler - and another van
ran over her legs - but no one stopped to help.
It was all
recorded by a surveillance camera, with the distressing footage shown on
television.
There have
been millions of internet comments about how to encourage good Samaritans - and
many more expressing outrage that so many people refused to help.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.