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Suicide Ruling in China Official’s Death Draws Ridicule
Suspicions about the death of a government official in a rural Chinese county have only grown since local authorities ruled the death a suicide.
While Chinese government officials are no strangers to suicide, several details surrounding the death of Xie Yexin, an anti-corruption official working in Gong’an County in central China’s Hubei Province make it seem rather unlikely that he took his own life.
For one, Mr. Xie, who was found dead in his office on Saturday, appears to have been stabbed. Eleven times.
Police in the Hubei city of Jingzhou came to the conclusion that he had committed suicide after a “meticulous investigation” involving multiple departments, the Beijing News reported Tuesday, citing a statement posted on the Gong’an County website.
Mr. Xie, wounded in the chest, neck, abdomen and both wrists, died from the rupture of a major vein near the heart, the newspaper quoted a Jingzhou public security official as saying.
The Gong’an County website was inaccessible Wednesday afternoon. A woman in the county propaganda office who would not give her name confirmed Wednesday that Mr. Xie’s death had been ruled a suicide and that authorities had found 11 wounds on his body, but would not answer any further questions on the case.
“We think he committed suicide. It is not a criminal case and we have no obligation to investigate,” Wang Jianping, a vice director of the Gong’an Security Bureau, was quoted as saying in a report on the English website of the Global Times.
Police found a knife (wrapped in tissue paper) on the floor of Mr. Xie’s office that matched the description of a knife missing from his home, the Global Times said, citing the Gong’an County statement.
Mr. Xie’s family members have refused to accept the verdict, arguing in interviews with various newspapers that he was in a good mood the day of his death and had no obvious reason to end his life. They’ve also questioned why someone who was going to stab himself to death would find it necessary to wrap the knife in tissue paper, or to cut himself so many times.
“If it was a suicide, why would there be such a long cut on his neck and also a wound on his wrist?” one unidentified family member was quoted by the Beijing Post as asking.
Mr. Xie had previously been part of a corruption investigation involving Gong’an County’s deputy Party secretary but was taken off the case a month before his death, the Global Times said.
The suicide verdict — the No. 3 topic on Chinese search engine Baidu Wednesday — was widely mocked online. Among the thousands of comments about the news on the Net Ease news portal, almost none appeared to take the verdict at face value.
“Very harmonious,” commented one Net Ease reader from Liaoning Province, while another reader from Guangdong Province wrote: “If this counts as suicide, there’s going to be a lot of ‘suicides’ in the future.”
Users of popular Twitter-like microblogging service Sina Weibo were likewise disbelieving.
“What kind of suicide is this? Has to be a Guinness record,” remarked a user writing under the name Sanfu Liangchao.
“If what the family members say is true, then [the authorities] are spouting nonsense while averting their eyes,” wrote Querytown. “After this, who will be willing to do anti-corruption work?”
Suicide Ruling in China Official’s Death Draws Ridicule - China Real Time Report - WSJ
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287,000 commit suicide in China each year
BEIJING, Sept. 8 (Xinhua) -- About 287,000 people commit suicide each year in China, accounting for 3.6 percent of the country's annual deaths, according to official statistics.
Seventy-five percent of suicide cases occur in rural areas, three times the number of suicides committed in cities, according to statistics posted on the website of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention.
"China's suicide rate reflects a trend that is different from other countries," said an article posted on the website.
Females are about 25 percent more likely to commit suicide than males in China, while in developed countries, male suicide rates are three times higher than female suicide rates, according to the article.
A joint survey conducted by the Chinese CDC and the Beijing-based Huilongguan Hospital ranks suicide as China's fifth leading cause of death overall and the leading cause of death for people between the ages of 15 and 34.
About two million Chinese citizens attempt suicide each year, a figure which has increased by 60 percent over the past 50 years, according to the CDC.
The high-profile suicides of government officials and business tycoons have aroused public attention in recent years. At least eight government officials at various levels succeeded in committing suicide last year.
One of this year's most prominent cases was the death of Zhang Haizhong, director of Hanshan District of the city of Handan in north China's Hebei Province. Zhang was found dead in his office on July 10; his death was investigated and ruled as a suicide.
287,000 commit suicide in China each year