Advertisement

Anger after Chinese university says deadly Shanghai stampede vindicated its ban on Christmas

A university in Xian sparked controversy after claiming the deadly New Year stampede in Shanghai had vindicated its earlier decision to ban its students from celebrating Christmas.

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
China's Modern College of Northwest University, in Xian, says its ban on students celebrating Christmas was 'vindicated' by the New Year's Eve stampede in Shanghai, which killed at least 36 people. Photo: AFP

A university in Xian sparked controversy after claiming the deadly New Year’s Eve stampede in Shanghai had vindicated its earlier decision to ban its students from celebrating Christmas.

Advertisement

Mainland media had initially criticised the Modern College of Northwest University’s arrangements over Christmas – including forcing students to watch patriotic propaganda films on Christmas Eve.

However, after the Shanghai stampede – in which at least 36 people were killed and 49 injured after pushing broke out on the waterfront – it issued a 2,000-character statement, entitled, “The unfortunate festival tragedy in Shanghai proved the university’s festival management was incomparably right”.

The university’s statement has gone viral on social media and attracted heated public debate.

It wrote: “If the Shanghai incident had occurred in Xian, if the Xian incident had occurred on Christmas Eve, and if there were students killed during the incident, then the value of the Modern College’s Christmas Eve management would stand out.”

DON'T MISS: Chinese families demand release of Shanghai stampede victims' bodies after foreigners' remains are returned

However, many Sina Weibo users called the statement “ridiculous” and “cold blooded”, while others mocked the comment saying, “You may choke when eating, so don’t eat anything”.

Advertisement