Not an elementary school student who was stabbed more than 200 times?
Sep 20, 2024
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According to local media Xiao Xiang Morning Herald, NetEase News and Hong Kong media South China Morning Post, a sixth-grader of an elementary school in Shandong Province, China, was constantly bullied by a male student sitting next to her.
The length of the awl was about 7-8cm, and most of them stabbed the leg.
According to the picture, holes were formed throughout the skin and muscles, and the pants were even pierced. There were 218 holes in the pants.
In addition, he was stabbed with a paper cutter, slapped, forced to eat paper and pencil lead, and was robbed of his money.
The girl informed the teacher of this, but the teacher told her to go to the health room and said "Don't provoke anyone else".
The parents, who found out about this late, protested to the school.
The parents lamented that `It was difficult to see my daughter go to boarding school and travel every weekend.'
The daughter lied about traveling with her friends because she didn't want to let her parents know she was being bullied.
According to the parents, the perpetrators who recently transferred often said "Father and the principal are friends."
In response to the parents' protest, the school held a meeting on whether to classify it as bullying or bullying. Fourteen people, including school officials, lawyers, and local police officers, participated in the meeting, with eight of them concluding that "It's not bullying."
The local education office also emphasized that it did not meet the criteria for school bullying" he said.
An official from the Office of Education explained that the two students remain in the same grade, but are no longer in the same class.
As the controversy spread, the Office of Education said it would send a new audit to investigate it intensively.
Netizens are saying "It doesn't make sense. "Is there a real background?", "It is not a bullying case as announced by the Office of Education, but an assault and a deliberate injury crime" and "The school should respect the opinions of the victims instead of judging whether they are bullied or not."
bellho@sportschosun.com