China executed two men responsible for deadly November 2024 attacks. Fan Weiqu, 62, killed 35 in a car rampage in Zhuhai, while Xu Jiajin, 21, fatally stabbed eight at a vocational school in Wuxi. Both acts,
China executes two men after deadly rampages that killed dozens - Both attacks raised concerns about so-called revenge on society crimes
China has executed two men who committed deadly attacks that killed dozens in November, raising concerns about a surge in what are called "revenge on society crimes," state media said.
China on Monday executed a man who killed 35 people in a car rampage in the southern city of Zhuhai in November, in the country's deadliest mass attack in years.
China has executed a man who killed 35 people by plowing his car into crowds at a sports center in November, in the country’s deadliest known attack against the public in a decade, state media reported Monday.
The country executed a man who killed 35 people in a car rampage in the southern city of Zhuhai in November, in the country’s deadliest mass attack in years.
Fan Weiqu rammed his car into a crowd, killing 35 people, while 21-year-old Xu Jiajin killed eight people and injured 17 in a stabbing attack last year.View on euronews
He was also executed on Monday, according to state broadcaster CCTV. The killings spurred Chinese ... s courts in the cities of Zhuhai and Wuxi, respectively, in December and approved by the ...
China on Monday executed a man who killed 35 people in a car rampage in the southern city of Zhuhai in November, in the country's deadliest mass attack in years.
Fan Weiqu had rammed his car into a crowd, killing 35, while Xu Jiajin, 21, killed eight people in a stabbing attack.
China executed two men on Monday for committing murderous attacks, amplifying fears over "revenge on society crimes." Fan Weiqu, 62, drove a car into a crowd in Zhuhai last November, killing at least 35.
China has executed two men who committed deadly attacks that killed dozens in November, raising concerns about a surge in what are called “revenge on society crimes.”