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As is common in such tragedies, relatives of victims were being kept away from the media, while police officers followed journalists, stopping and removing them from some areas and demanding identification. At least one television crew was forcibly ejected from its hotel. The carnage started as class was beginning Wednesday, the local government said. It said Wu entered the kindergarten and killed Wu Hongying and a student on the spot, then began hacking at the 18 others, according to a city government statement. Six students and Wu Hongying's 80-year-old mother died later in the hospital of their wounds, it said. None of the 11 hospitalized survivors was in immediate danger. Wu is a common Chinese surname, and it wasn't clear if the assailant and administrator were related. Sociologists say the recent attacks that have left 17 dead and scores wounded reflect the tragic consequences of ignoring mental illness and rising stress resulting from huge social inequalities in China's fast-changing society. A recent study in the British medical journal The Lancet found that less than 10 percent of 173 million Chinese adults believed to suffer from mental illness had ever received professional help. "The perpetrators have contracted a 'social psychological infectious disease' that shows itself in a desire to take revenge on society," said Zhou Xiaozheng of Beijing's Renmin University. "They pick children as targets because they are the weakest and most vulnerable," Zhou said. The attackers in recent cases have all been men in their 30s or 40s, most of them out of work. Knives and hammers are the preferred weapons
-- guns are tightly controlled in China and obtaining them virtually impossible. The government has sought to show it has the problem under control, mindful especially of worries among middle-class families who, limited in most cases to one child due to population control policies, invest huge amounts of money and effort to raise their offspring.
[Associated
Press;
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