Japanese schoolboy killer in China's Shenzhen executed
The boy died a day after being stabbed on his way to the Japanese school in Shenzhen. PHOTO: ST FILE
TOKYO - A Chinese man convicted of fatally stabbing a 10-year-old Japanese schoolboy in Shenzhen, southern China, in September has been executed, a diplomatic source said on April 21.
Zhong Changchun was sentenced to death in January for killing the boy – the son of a Japanese father and a Chinese mother – near a Japanese school in the southern city. He did not appeal the sentence.
The Chinese Foreign Ministry informed the Japanese Embassy in Beijing on April 21 that the man had been executed, according to the source.
The man from Jiangxi Province told a Jan 24 court hearing that he hoped to speak with the victim's family, as well as the Japanese Embassy in China, but he did not say he had specifically targeted Japanese nationals, said Mr Kenji Kanasugi, ambassador to China.
Zhong attacked the boy after buying a knife to 'draw online attention' through the assault, the envoy quoted the court ruling as saying.
The boy died the following day after being stabbed on his way to the Japanese school in Shenzhen.
The stabbing occurred on the 93rd anniversary of the Japanese bombing of a railroad track near Shenyang, which marked the beginning of the Manchurian Incident that led to Japan's invasion of north-eastern China.
Last week, Japanese government officials said a Chinese man convicted of killing a Chinese woman and injuring two Japanese nationals in a knife attack last June at a Japanese school bus stop in Suzhou near Shanghai had been executed. KYODO NEWS
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
4 hours ago
- Straits Times
Mexico's president says her flag should not fly over protests that turn violent
The Mexican flag has become a symbol of defiance in demonstrations against immigration raids. PHOTO: AFP Mexico's president says her flag should not fly over protests that turn violent MEXICO CITY – Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum on June 13 said the appearance of the flag of Mexico at protests that had turned violent in the United States was a 'provocation' that threatened to tarnish her country's reputation. The Mexican flag has become a symbol of defiance in demonstrations against immigration raids while also a flash point among supporters of those policies. Ms Sheinbaum has tried to balance her response to the protests by defending Mexican nationals while condemning violence, and this week she denied an accusation by a top Trump official that she had encouraged violence. Ms Sheinbaum on June 13 broadly criticised images of disturbances on US streets that featured the Mexican flag, without offering who she believed was responsible for flying her country's banner. The images of protesters waving the flag, she said, 'have all the appearance of being a provocation and of wanting to generate a certain image of Mexico.' Ms Sheinbaum specifically referred to a widely circulated picture of a shirtless man waving Mexico's green, white and red flag while atop a vandalised car in Los Angeles. 'That does not mean that we are not outraged by the way Mexicans and other nationalities are being detained in the United States. We are against these raids,' she added. 'But we must be very clear that these violent actions are a provocation. From whom? We do not know.' Ms Sheinbaum's remarks underscored how she is trying to balance Mexico's relations with the United States as the countries negotiate tariffs and the Trump administration's pushing of Mexico to do more against drug cartels. She has also underscored the detention of at least 61 Mexican nationals in Los Angeles, including some who have already been deported. In many cases, Ms Sheinbaum said, the Mexican government believes that the detainees were denied due process and consulate officials have provided legal council. Earlier this week, Ms Sheinbaum faced accusations from Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem of encouraging demonstrations in Los Angeles. On June 10, Ms Noem told reporters: 'Claudia Sheinbaum came out and encouraged more protests in LA, and I condemn her for that.' 'People are allowed to peacefully protest,' Ms Noem added. 'But the violence that we're seeing is not acceptable, and it's not going to happen in America.' Ms Sheinbaum said on social media that the accusation was 'absolutely false.' She noted that she had repeatedly condemned violent demonstrations, a point she repeated on June 13. 'When you are against something, you have every right to demonstrate peacefully,' she said, and called on her fellow Mexicans to not join violent demonstrations. 'Even more so if you are in the United States: You have to do it peacefully.' NYTIMES Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
6 hours ago
- Straits Times
US adversaries fuel disinformation about LA protests
Protestes waving Mexican and US flags face off with police during a protest in downtown Los Angeles, on June 9. PHOTO: AFP WASHINGTON - Russia, China and Iran are amplifying disinformation about protests over immigration raids in Los Angeles, researchers said on June 13, adding to a surge of domestically generated falsehoods and conspiracy theories. The findings from researchers at the disinformation watchdog NewsGuard illustrate how foreign adversaries of the United States are exploiting deep divisions in American society as a tactic of information warfare. NewsGuard said Russian, Chinese, and Iranian state-affiliated sources have published around 10,000 posts and articles about the demonstrations that recently erupted in Los Angeles, advancing false claims framing the city as 'ground zero in an American apocalypse.' Seizing on the political rift between President Donald Trump and Governor Gavin Newsom, pro-China accounts on X and Chinese platforms such as Douyin and Weibo have peddled unfounded claims that California was ready to secede from the United States and declare independence. Meanwhile, Tehran-based newspapers have peddled the false claim that popular Iranian singer-songwriter Andranik Madadian had been detained by the National Guard in Los Angeles, in an apparent effort to portray the United States as an authoritarian state. NewsGuard quoted Madadian, better known by his stage name Andy, as denying the claim, stating: 'I am fine. Please don't believe these rumors.' Russian media and pro-Russian influencers, meanwhile, has embraced right-wing conspiracy theories, including the unfounded claim that the Mexican government was stoking the demonstrations against Trump's immigration policies. 'The demonstrations are unfolding at the intersection of multiple vulnerabilities such as eroded trust in institutions, AI chatbots amplifying false claims about the unrest, political polarization, and a rollback of safety and moderation efforts by major platforms,' Ms McKenzie Sadeghi, a researcher with NewsGuard, told AFP. 'As a result, foreign actors have a wide-open playing field to flood the zone with falsehoods at a faster rate and fewer barriers compared to previous moments of unrest,' she added. The apparent alignment across the three countries was noteworthy, Sadeghi said. 'While Russia, China, and Iran regularly push their own unique forms of disinformation, it's less common to see them move in such a coordinated fashion like this,' she said. 'This time, state media outlets have escalated their messaging to advance their geopolitical interests and deflect attention from their own domestic crises.' The disinformation comes on top of false narratives promoted by US-based influencers. In recent days, conservative social media users have circulated two photographs of brick piles they claimed were strategically placed for the California protesters to hurl at police and inflame violence. The photos were cited as proof that the protests were fuelled by nonprofit organisations supported by George Soros, the billionaire philanthropist who has long been a bogeyman for the far right. But AFP's fact-checkers found that one photo was lifted from an online marketplace, where a Malaysian hardware dealer uploaded it years ago, while the other was snapped near a construction site in New Jersey. 'Every time there's a popular protest, the old clickbaity 'pallets of bricks' hoax shows up right on cue,' the Social Media Lab, a research center at the Toronto Metropolitan University, wrote on the platform Bluesky. 'The fact that these types of fake images are used isn't a coincidence. It's part of a pernicious (and) persistent narrative that protests against government policies are somehow inauthentic.' AFP Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
8 hours ago
- Straits Times
Boca Juniors defender Costa gets special U.S. visa for Club World Cup following earlier rejection
Boca Juniors defender Costa gets special U.S. visa for Club World Cup following earlier rejection Boca Juniors defender Ayrton Costa will be able to take part in the Club World Cup in the United States following a u-turn by U.S. immigration officials who had previously rejected his visa application, the Argentine club said on Friday. "Ayrton Costa has been granted a 26-day special visa," a club spokesperson told Reuters. Costa's visa application was subject to a criminal complaint in his native Argentina, relating to an aggravated robbery in 2018, which he avoided trial for by accepting a probationary sentence in 2023. However, U.S. officials previously ruled that he could not enter the country as he was still serving his sentence. The press office at the U.S. embassy in Argentina told Reuters that they cannot discuss individual visa applications. Boca Juniors will open the tournament in Miami on Monday against Portuguese side Benfica. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.