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Why some experts say China urgently needs a crisis system to stop ‘lone wolf’ killings

After recent deadly attacks, country’s public security system needs ‘clear legal bases’ to identify high-risk individuals, experts say

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A man lights a candle outside a fitness plaza in Zhuhai on November 12 where several people died after a vehicle was intentionally rammed into them. Experts say high-risk people are not getting the help they need because of China’s inadequate mental health care strategy. Photo: AP
Yuanyue Dangin Beijing
China needs a crisis intervention system to identify high-risk individuals to help prevent the kinds of “lone wolf” attacks that have left more than 40 people dead this month, according to two legal experts.
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“We need to put more effort into mental health crisis intervention and conflict resolution, and urgently establish a systematic prevention mechanism,” the experts said in an article published on Chinese news site Guancha.cn on Monday.

The authors – Gao Yandong, deputy dean of the Institute of Digital Rule of Law at Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, and research assistant Liu Yicen – cited two deadly attacks this month as examples of how China’s public security system needed to provide “clear legal bases and operational norms” for “identifying high-risk individuals”.

The first case involved a vehicle ramming in the southern city of Zhuhai in which 35 people died and the second was a stabbing in the eastern province of Jiangsu that killed eight.

Authorities said the suspect in the Zhuhai attack was upset about a divorce ruling, while the 21-year-old Jiangsu stabbing suspect was a university student who had been denied his graduation certificate after failing exams and was also angry about the low pay he received as a factory intern.

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In both cases, the suspects should have received psychological help, Gao and Liu said in the article.

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