Bitter lessons learned from tragedy (China Daily) Updated: 2004-02-06 22:16
No tragedy could be more tragic than losing loved
ones on a day which supposed to represent togetherness.
Such calamity struck dozens of Beijing families Thursday night when 37 lives
were lost during a lantern and fireworks display in Miyun County in suburban
Beijing.
Bao Yueming (left)
receives treatment at a Miyun County Hospital in Beijing, as his
five-year-old son (right) survives a killing
stampede. [newsphoto]
In Chinese tradition, the 15th day of the first lunar month is known as
Lantern Festival and is a time for family reunions. Eating sweet dumplings, as
well as appreciating lanterns and fireworks, remain the most authentic rituals
for the occasion.
Thursday should have been a celebration of joy and happiness for all in the
Year of Monkey.
But when one person slipped and fell on a narrow metal bridge packed with
spectators, a joyous crowd turned into a dangerous mob all of a sudden. As some
onlookers fell like dominoes, witnesses say, the throng stampeded.
The accident killed at least 37 and injured more than 20, mostly women and
children.
For those who unfortunately lost a mother, a wife, a daughter, a young son, a
friend, or anyone they held dear on that black Thursday, sweet dumplings on
every Lantern Festival thereafter will be a bitter reminder of the havoc.
The dead cannot come back to life, no matter what we do.
Competent authorities have an obligation to do the best they can to assuage
the pain the disaster has inflicted upon the unfortunate families.
There is little doubt about their ability to present a reasonable account of
the accident through investigation. There is even less doubt about the need for
an acceptable compensation package, especially when taking into consideration
President Hu Jintao's personal request for a satisfactory solution.
More important, however, is that all should learn from what happened.
The debacle appeared to be a pure accident which arose out of nowhere. Had
that poor reveler not slipped and fell, had those onlookers not fallen in the
confusion, or had the crowd not stampeded, there might have been no deaths or
injuries at all.
Had there been proper precautions, like controlling the human flow over that
bridge, the scenario might have been quite different.
Organizers should have anticipated the potential dangers in an orderless
crowd and taken actions correspondingly.
In a country populous as ours, crowds are too common to be avoided. For this
reason alone, those paid to take care of public order should learn and do more
about crowd management.
It will not be fair, however, to consign everything involving public order to
outsiders.
There is no guarantee the misfortune will not repeat itself unless everyone
in the crowd learn something from the tragedy.
It may sound mean to lay any blame on those in the crowd Thursday night.
Nobody should be faulted for simply being there.
But before lining up in an orderly manner for any number of reasons becomes
part of this nation's collective awareness, we need to remember we are putting
ourselves in harm's way whenever we join a disorderly mob.
For our own safety's sake, we should choose our crowds
wisely.