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Editorial | Murder-suicide cases show need to review Hong Kong welfare safety net

  • Carers from all sections of city society carry financial and psychological burdens, but official help appears to mainly target those from grass-roots families

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Recurring murder-suicide cases underscore the problems facing those from all walks of life as Hong Kong tries to cope with a rapidly ageing population on limited resources. Photo: Winson Wong

Murder-suicide cases make more than sensational news headlines. The recurrence of such incidents in Hong Kong, the latest involving an elderly couple in an upscale residential neighbourhood, prompts deeper reflection on the common problems facing those from all walks of life as the city tries to cope with a rapidly ageing population on limited resources.

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The circumstances that prompted a 71-year-old woman to take the life of her ailing 84-year-old husband before trying to kill herself can only be imagined by those who have no experience as carers. The man, who suffered from dementia and muscle atrophy, was found dead with tape covering his nose and mouth inside a Kowloon Tong flat, while his wife was discovered injured and unconscious on the floor beside a bloodstained knife near his bed.

She reportedly had experienced suicidal thoughts and was worried about not being able to take care of her husband. The incident was reported to police when a domestic helper arrived that morning to change the man’s underclothing, and the woman has since been charged with murder.

Such tragedies more typically occur among the poor and underprivileged, who often lack the awareness and financial means to take better care of themselves. But the couple in the latest incident came from a rich and prominent family with extensive business and personal interests in society.

The circumstances that prompted a 71-year-old woman to take the life of her 84-year-old dementia-patient husband before trying to kill herself at their Beacon Hill Road flat in Kowloon Tong can only be imagined by those who have no experience as carers. The woman has been charged with murder. Photo: Google
The circumstances that prompted a 71-year-old woman to take the life of her 84-year-old dementia-patient husband before trying to kill herself at their Beacon Hill Road flat in Kowloon Tong can only be imagined by those who have no experience as carers. The woman has been charged with murder. Photo: Google

And, unlike in previous cases, they were not known to be receiving help from the government.

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