World

Chinese official storms into meeting, fires on mayor, party boss, kills himself

Beijing. A city official in south-west China unleashed a barrage of gunfire on the city's mayor and Communist Party secretary during a meeting on Wednesday, injuring them before fleeing and killing himself, the official news media reported.

Privately owned guns are rare in China, because of a virtual ban on civilian use, and grisly attacks on officials by colleagues are also uncommon.

So rumours of the shooting in Panzhihua, an industrial city in Sichuan province, rippled quickly across the Chinese internet even before local authorities confirmed the news.

Panzhihua was built as part of Mao Zedong's plans to relocate factories deep inland, where they would be protected from a feared war.

But the violence in this isolated site was nonetheless an embarrassing breach of the efforts by China's president, Xi Jinping, to remake officialdom into a clean, impeccably disciplined bureaucracy.

Details were sparse, and there were no clues to the gunman's motives. But the brief initial report in the state media sketched a scene of the head of the Panzhihua Land and Resources Bureau, Chen Zhongshu, bursting into a meeting at an exhibition centre and opening fire on officials there.

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"The gunman stormed into the meeting, fired repeatedly at the main leading comrades of the city party committee and government and then fled," said an online report by Sichuan Daily, an official provincial newspaper, citing the Panzhihua government press office.

The suspect in the shooting, Chen, was found dead in the exhibition centre. He had taken his own life, the report said without giving details.

The mayor, Li Jianqin, and party secretary, Zhang Yan, were wounded and sent to the hospital but their injuries were not considered life-threatening, the report said.

Zhang, the party secretary, has worked in Panzhihua since 2006, and the mayor, Li, has worked there since last year, according to Chinese news reports.

Both officials went to meetings and inspection visits with Chen previously, but there was nothing in the earlier reports to suggest trouble brewing.

Photos on Chinese news websites showed armoured vehicles and paramilitary troops massed outside the exhibition centre in the aftermath of the violence.

New York Times