China sees fewer violent crimes on campus: report
BEIJING — China saw a drop in the number of violent campus crimes between 2015 and 2017, a report from judicial sources revealed.
The report, compiled by the China Justice Big Data Institution, collected court rulings between 2015 and 2017 on criminal cases which took place on campuses or in the vicinity of schools with students as defendants.
The report said that courts nationwide in 2015 concluded trials of over 1,000 cases involving violent crimes on campuses and the number declined by 16.51 percent and 13.37 percent respectively in the following two years to no more than 800 last year.
It found that about 57.5 percent of such crimes were intentional injury. Other crimes included robbery, public violence, homicide, blackmail, rape, and forced prostitution.
According to the report, about 13.46 percent of violent campus crimes were premeditated, but the proportion among intentional campus homicide cases was much higher -- reaching 69.76 percent.
- World Television Day celebrated with conference in Shanxi
- University launches new AI department to align with national priorities
- Jilin kicks off 2025-26 snow season with grand opening event
- China hails 'hard-won' COP30 Global Mutirao decision
- China-SA science exhibition showcases innovation, cultural exchange
- China opens draft regulations on data protection to public consultation































