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Rescuers attempt to find eight primary school students who fell into the Fu River in Chongqing. The bodies of all eight pupils were retrieved. Photo: Weibo

Eight children drown in southwest China after playing near river, prompting calls for water awareness lessons

  • Seven children believed to have gone to the rescue of friend who fell in the river before all drowned
  • Incident sparks new calls for children to be taught basic rescue techniques and first aid at school

The bodies of eight primary school students have been retrieved by rescuers after they drowned in a river in southwest China, state news agency Xinhua reported on Monday.

The students fell into a river in the village of Tongjia, in the Tongnan district of Chongqing, at around 3.30pm on Sunday, the district’s publicity department said.

Eight pupils fell into a river in the village of Tongjia, Tongnan district at around 3.30pm on Sunday. None survived. Photo: Weibo

The victims were pupils at a local primary school who were playing by the Fu River when one of them fell in. The other seven tried to save the first student and all fell in, an early government report said.

The local government promptly sent a rescue team. A video obtained by the Chutian Metro Daily showed rescuers searching the riverbanks and preparing rafts while villagers watched.

Villagers told the newspaper that the part of the river where the children fell was about 50 metres (164 feet) wide. Most of the students who fell in were girls. Several bodies were retrieved by Sunday night.

An investigation was under way, local authorities said. Meanwhile, the families of the students were being contacted.

The incident has reignited public discussion about how to prevent children from drowning, particularly in summer. Drownings occur in rivers and ponds across China every year.

In August, in three Chinese cities, 15 children drowned within a week, all bathing or playing near bodies of water.

The rescue operation: the young drowning victims were pupils at a local primary school playing by the Fu River when one of them fell in. Photo: Weibo

There have been many public appeals for better safety education in schools and for the danger of unregulated bodies of water to be highlighted. There have also been calls for all children to be taught basic first aid.

In 2012, a junior school in Yichang, in central Hubei province, started mandatory swimming lessons for all students after five children in the city drowned playing by the Yangtze River. The school said that instead of banning children from going near water, they would teach them about its dangers and how to keep themselves safe.

Rescue and first aid techniques were also lacking in school education in China, others said. One person commented on microblogging site Weibo that instead of trying to rescue their friend, the seven students should have sought help from adults.

Some also claimed there were inadequate warnings and supervision of lakes and rivers in the country.

“There are warning signs close to rivers and ponds but there are no high fences or other security precautions, such as having supervisors close by,” one commenter said on Weibo.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Eight children drown after falling into river
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