When China hides disasters in a memory hole
A revealing attempt to forget a terrible plane crash
ONLY A FEW fire-blackened branches and tree stumps, half hidden by young green ferns, betray the horrors that visited this valley in southern China a little over two years ago. No shrine or memorial stone marks the place where 132 people on a domestic flight from Kunming to Guangzhou lost their lives. They died in the early afternoon of March 21st 2022 when their China Eastern Boeing 737 hit the ground in a near-vertical nosedive, travelling at close to the speed of sound.
Explore more
More from China
Why China banned international adoptions
Much has changed since the programme was started
Can Xi Jinping take Hong Kong “from stability to prosperity”?
A fixation on security may cost the city in the long term
China is beating America in the nuclear-energy race
They have pioneered a new generation of reactor
Liberalism is far from dead in China
Despite an intense clampdown, it may even be drawing more adherents
How to get kicked out of China’s Communist Party
Officials are trying to expel slackers and the superstitious
Why Xi Jinping is envious of his predecessor
China’s ruler would like to grab Deng Xiaoping’s legacy