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How a Chinese family's grief became a national conspiracy thanks to missing CCTV footage

Chinese family's grief became a national conspiracy thanks to missing CCTV footage

By ZerefPublished 2 years ago 4 min read
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How a Chinese family's grief became a national conspiracy thanks to missing CCTV footage
Photo by Kelly Sikkema on Unsplash

On Mother’s Day last Sunday, 17-year-old Lin Weiqi wished his mother – referred to only as Madame Lu in Chinese media – a good day. “Mum, enjoy your day,” he said to her that morning. He was Lu’s only child. Like most Chinese parents of the one-child generation, Lin was her pride and joy.

Late in the afternoon, before Lin had gone back to his school in the south-western city of Chengdu, Lu prepared snacks for him in case he was hungry in the evening. Nothing seemed out of the ordinary until an hour later.

Lin had fallen from a building and was dead, the school told Lu and her husband two hours after the incident. His body had been sent to the undertaker already, the police said, which meant the parents were not able to see their son for the last time.

The school said it had immediately called an ambulance but by the time it had arrived, Lin was dead.

Lu told Chinese media later that, that same night and through the early morning, she and her husband had first asked to see their son’s body, then the location of the alleged incident and the surveillance footage. “But to no avail,” she said.

Desperate and heartbroken, Lu took to the Chinese social media site Weibo on Monday morning, pleading for help. “We are law-abiding and reasonable citizens … as a mother, I just want to see my son. Where is he lying in the cold, who can tell me?” she wrote. “I’m sorry, son, your mother wasn’t able to protect you; cannot even ask for justice for you.”

The post went viral within a few hours. Hundreds of thousands of Weibo users responded with outpourings of sympathy and criticism of the school, the police and “the system”. A related hashtag was created, which so far has been read more than 1.8 billion times.

“Why is footage missing?”

“As a mother, one can never accept that her son dies before her … the school doesn’t even allow parents to get into the campus. What are they hiding?” one said on Weibo. “This is horrible. The school should tell the truth,” wrote another.

Rebuffed by the school, Lu sat outside its gate, holding her son’s portrait and crying. One Weibo user pointed out that on the wall behind her was the school motto: “Seek truth from facts, pursue perfection from average”. “How ironic,” one commented.The photo has become the defining image of the tragedy.

Later that day, Lu posted on Weibo again, saying she had been told by local media that they couldn’t help her. “The water is too deep,” she said she was told. Lu also reported that she had now had the chance to inspect the footage but, “only that part [of the moment of his death] was missing.”

The plot thickened. Sympathetic Weibo commenters questioned why this was the case in a country where surveillance cameras are said to be near-ubiquitous. Some even compiled a list of similar incidents over the years. One remarked: “they [the school] only let you see the surveillance footage convenient to them.” This comment was liked by over 4,000 Weibo users.

Questions about the school – and a rash of conspiracy theories about how Lin had died so “mysteriously” – flooded Chinese social media. Anonymous commenters on Weibo claimed they knew the truth, but they were afraid to speak out for fear of reprisals. Some questioned why the school, pupils and teachers were all silent, suspecting foul play; others started to report experiencing online censorship, adding to the suspicion that something sinister was going on.

Subsequently, school officials spoke to the official Xinhua news agency to explain why they took the actions they did; the Observer’s repeated calls to the school and the local police station have gone unanswered.

“Truth, truth, truth”

In today’s China, this unusual incident reflects the frustration many citizens experience when seeking justice. It also offers a window into how a lack of trust between the authorities and their citizens plays out in a tightly controlled yet highly connected Chinese society.

Perhaps stung by the cascade of emotion, a high-profile official newspaper, Reference News, commented on its Weibo account: “Only when truthfully responding to the public’s concern can suspicion be dispelled.”

A few hours later, at 3.54am on Tuesday, local education authorities released the results of their joint investigation. They concluded that Lin had died by suicide, attributed to “personal issues”, and that there was no possibility of foul play.

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Zeref

Ends Well All is Well

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