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Japan
This Week in AsiaPolitics

Outrage in Japan as ‘indoctrination’ blamed for stabbings of woman, child in China

  • Observers say anti-Japanese sentiment in China verges on ‘irrational hatred’, urge Japanese companies to recall families of staff overseas

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Security officers stand guard in front of the Japanese embassy in Beijing on Tuesday, a day after a Japanese woman, her son and a Chinese woman were stabbed by a man at a school bus stop in Suzhou near Shanghai. Photo: Kyodo
Julian Ryall
An attack on a Japanese woman and her young son by a Chinese man has triggered a fierce backlash in Japan, with many laying the blame on years of anti-Japanese “indoctrination” in schools and state-run media.

The woman, who has not been identified but is in her 30s, and her preschool age son were apparently attacked on Monday along with a Chinese woman as they waited for a bus to her other child’s Japanese school in the city of Suzhou in Jiangsu province.

The city is a key location for many Japanese corporations’ operations in China and has a sizeable Japanese expatriate population, as well as Japanese schools and shops.

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The woman and her child were treated at a local hospital and did not sustain serious injuries, although the Chinese woman was in a critical condition, Jiji Press reported.

The bus stop in Suzhou near Shanghai where a Japanese woman, her son and a Chinese woman were stabbed on Monday. Photo: Kyodo
The bus stop in Suzhou near Shanghai where a Japanese woman, her son and a Chinese woman were stabbed on Monday. Photo: Kyodo

A Chinese foreign ministry spokesman on Tuesday called the knife attack an isolated incident and said it could have happened in any country in the world.

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