The government of Gansu province in northwestern China said yesterday that three officials face possible dismissal and three others have been reprimanded over the case of Yang Gailan, a 28-year-old villager who axed her four young children to death and killed herself because she couldn't feed them. Yang's husband killed himself a week later.
The case drew intense attention in the national press and on social media after details emerged about the family's dire circumstances.
No criminal proceedings will be filed against the punished officials, according to the Gansu government statement. Local government had pledged to severely punish officials if an investigation into the case uncovered any wrongdoing.
Despite the grisly nature of the case and widespread criticism of the local government, China's central authorities have allowed the public to discuss with a relative degree of freedom by Chinese standards whether poverty relief has been carried out adequately. State media outlets, including the Communist Party flagship newspaper People's Daily, have also covered Yang's case closely.
In a column on the web portal Sina.Com, writer Jun Hongqiao questioned whether local county officials had been carrying out poverty relief measures evenly and appropriately or simply hyping their progress in the media.
"If the entire village's roads have been widened, farmers' houses have been fixed beautifully, the tap water's running clear, then why was Yang Gailan still living in dilapidated, dangerous conditions?" Jun wrote.
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