logo
3-Year-Old Boy In China Miraculously Survives Fall From 18th-Floor Apartment

3-Year-Old Boy In China Miraculously Survives Fall From 18th-Floor Apartment

NDTV4 days ago
A 3-year-old boy in China miraculously survived a fall from the 18th floor of his apartment. According to the South China Morning Post, the incident occurred on July 15 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, when the little boy was left in the care of his grandparents. Believing that the child was asleep, the grandparents briefly left home to buy groceries, locking the door of the flat to ensure that the toddler stayed inside. However, the child woke up and went to the bathroom, where he climbed onto the toilet and out of an unlocked window that had no safety bars, plunging down.
According to the SCMP, the boy's fall was broken by a tree, and he miraculously survived. The toddler was found on the ground by a resident from the same community who filmed the scene and posted the footage in the property management group. It was only after seeing the message that the child's father, identified as Zhu, learned that his son had fallen.
"At first, I could not believe he had fallen from the 18th floor until surveillance footage from the property management group confirmed it," the father said, per the outlet. He added that during the fall, his son had likely been "obstructed" by an open window on the 17th floor, which caused a "deviation" in his trajectory. This led him to land directly on a tree before hitting the ground. "Otherwise, the child would have landed directly on the concrete," Zhu said.
A surveillance footage also showed the child brushing past an open window and landing in the branches of a tree before plunging face-first into a bush on the ground, rather than directly on concrete.
After being discovered, the boy was immediately rushed to the hospital. Doctors described his survival as a "miracle," The Independent reported. The little boy sustained a fractured left arm, spinal strain and damage to internal organs. But his head remained uninjured, and he was fully conscious throughout. Astonishingly, the boy even asked the medical team to "ask daddy to buy me a Bumblebee" toy shortly after the incident.
As a mark of gratitude, the boy's father later adorned the "life-saving tree" with a large red flower - a traditional Chinese symbol of honour and celebration.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What is the bullying case in China that has led to rare protests?
What is the bullying case in China that has led to rare protests?

First Post

time2 hours ago

  • First Post

What is the bullying case in China that has led to rare protests?

Protests have erupted in Jiangyou in China's southwest after a video of a schoolgirl being bullied by her classmates went viral. This comes in the backdrop of bullying in China being a subject of fierce public debate. But what happened? How have authorities responded? read more China has vowed to crack down on school bullying. Protest are a rare thing in China. And for good reason. Everyone knows about Tiananmen square in 1989, where the state ruthlessly stamped out political opposition. But that hasn't stopped protests from erupting in Jiangyou in the country's southwest after a video of a schoolgirl being bullied by her classmates went viral. This comes in the backdrop of bullying in China being a subject of public debate. In 2024, a high-profile sparked discussion about the punishment being meted out to juvenile offenders. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD But what happened? What do we know? How have the authorities responded? Let's take a closer look What happened? Videos on Chinese social media showed a young girl named Lai being pummelled with kicks and slaps in China's Sichuan province. The culprits? Three other teenagers. The video shows Lai, the victim, being forced to kneel in front of her assailants. The incident, which occurred in July, was filmed by passers-by. Videos purportedly show Lai being hit with a stick. Lai warned her assailants she would call the police, only to be dismissed by her attackers. One of the girls said she they were not afraid, while another claimed she had been to the police station over 10 times. She added that she had been let off in under 20 minutes. Lai was left with multiple bruises on Lai's scalp and knees, according to the police. The three suspects, all female, are 13, 14 and 15. There are reports that the girl, Lai, had been bullied incessantly. Her mother, who is reportedly deaf, had been pleading with authorities to act. Things reportedly got bloody after the police used batons and cattle prods to disperse the crowd. Image courtesy: Human Rights in China/X Police on August 4 said two of the attackers were being sent to a correctional The onlookers and a third girl who participated in the abuse were 'criticised and educated', the police added. They said the teens' guardians had been 'ordered to exercise strict discipline'. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD But not everyone is satisfied. Those online have demanded more punishment for the teenagers who attacked Lai, particularly given the reports that the victim had been bullied for a while. 'The sentence is too light… that is why they were so arrogant,' one top-liked Weibo comment under the police statement read. Then, on Monday, over 1,000 protesters took to the streets in Jiangyou. Protests were held outside local government offices. The demonstrators gathered till well after midnight. How have authorities reacted? By cracking down on protesters. Things reportedly got bloody after the police used batons and cattle prods to disperse the crowd. Video footage taken outside the city hall showed at least two people forcibly pulled aside by a group of blue-shirted and plain-clothes police officers; a woman in a black dress was also dragged away by her limbs. 'They're sweeping away citizens everywhere,' a person can be heard saying on the video, as the woman is dragged away. More footage taken after dark showed the police wearing black Swat uniforms subduing at least three people at an intersection with hundreds of bystanders. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Firstpost has not independently verified the authenticity of the videos. On August 5, Jiangyou was the second top-trending topic on Weibo – China's version of X –before it and related hashtags were censored. Police also denied that the assailants were children of a lawyer and police inspector. They said two of the parents are unemployed, while two others are working outside the province. One is a local salesperson and another is a delivery driver, police added. On August 5, local authorities said on WeChat that the police had punished two people for fabricating information about the school bullying case, warning the public against spreading rumours. They said the posts have 'seriously disrupted public order and caused bad social impact'. A Shanghai-based lawyer wrote on Weibo, 'The penalty for causing minor injuries is too mild, while the physical and mental trauma suffered by victims is overlooked by the law, which leads to a significant imbalance in the protection of their rights". STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD This comes after a number of high-profile cases. In January, the death of the teen caused violent protests in northwest China. The protests saw demonstrators target police in Shaanxi province's Pucheng. Authorities claimed the teen died in an accident, but social media was rife with rumours of a cover up. In December, a court sentenced a teenage boy to life in prison and gave another a long prison term for murdering a classmate. The suspects, all aged under 14 at the time of the murder, were accused of bullying a 13-year-old classmate over a long period before killing him in an abandoned greenhouse and burying his body. Another boy was given 12 years in prison, while a third whom the court found did not harm the victim was sentenced to correctional education. With inputs from agencies

Why Taiwan government has arrested three employees of the world's biggest chipmaker
Why Taiwan government has arrested three employees of the world's biggest chipmaker

Time of India

time5 hours ago

  • Time of India

Why Taiwan government has arrested three employees of the world's biggest chipmaker

Taiwan government have detained three current and former employees of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) for allegedly stealing trade secrets related to the world's most advanced chip technology. TSMC fired several employees after discovering the breach through routine internal monitoring, then initiated legal proceedings that led to the arrests. The case marks the first major prosecution under Taiwan's amended National Security Act, with suspects facing up to 12 years in prison and fines exceeding $3 million. The company, which produces 90% of the world's most advanced semiconductors for companies like Apple and Nvidia, detected unauthorized access to sensitive information about its cutting-edge 2-nanometer chip technology , expected to enter mass production later this year. TSMC's 2nm secrets at center of alleged theft The case involves proprietary information about TSMC's 2-nanometer manufacturing process, currently the most sophisticated chip technology globally. Taiwan's High Prosecutors Office confirmed that three suspects were detained on "serious suspicions of violating national security laws," while three others were released on bail. Prosecutors revealed the investigation began when TSMC detected unusual file access patterns by current employees. Internal investigations uncovered that former employees had allegedly colluded with current staff to obtain "national core technology trade secrets." The breach occurred at TSMC's Hsinchu facility, where the company produces its most advanced chips. Tough penalties under Taiwan's new security laws Taiwan amended its National Security Act in 2022 specifically to protect critical technologies from foreign adversaries, particularly targeting semiconductor innovations more advanced than 14-nanometer processes. The legislation addresses growing concerns about Chinese companies obtaining chip manufacturing expertise by recruiting Taiwanese engineers. Under the enhanced law, violations involving national core technologies carry severe penalties: imprisonment up to 12 years and fines reaching NT$100 million ($3.3 million). The comprehensive framework protects defense, aerospace, agricultural, semiconductor, and information security technologies deemed vital to Taiwan's national interests. TSMC emphasized its "zero-tolerance policy toward any actions that compromise the protection of trade secrets," stating it will pursue violations "to the fullest extent of the law." The company has previously fought extended legal battles against competitors who obtained its technology through former employees, including cases involving Samsung and China's Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation. The investigation continues as prosecutors work to determine the suspects' motives and whether any sensitive information was actually transmitted to competitors or foreign entities.

Taiwan Arrests Six in Probe of TSMC Chip Technology Leak
Taiwan Arrests Six in Probe of TSMC Chip Technology Leak

Mint

time6 hours ago

  • Mint

Taiwan Arrests Six in Probe of TSMC Chip Technology Leak

(Bloomberg) -- Taiwan prosecutors arrested six people suspected of stealing trade secrets from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., opening an investigation into a potential breach of national security involving a global tech industry linchpin. The chipmaker to Nvidia Corp. reported a number of former and current staff to authorities on suspicion they illegally obtained core technology. A total of six people were arrested, with two posting bail and one released afterwards, said Taiwan High Prosecutors Office spokesman John Nieh. Prosecutors searched the homes of some staff between July 25 and July 28, the agency said in a statement. It's now trying to find out if data had been leaked to other parties. TSMC is the world's most advanced maker of semiconductors, from Nvidia AI accelerators to Apple Inc. iPhone processors. The case coincides with a quickening race by the likes of Meta Platforms Inc. and DeepSeek to develop artificial intelligence in the post-ChatGPT era, which requires billions of dollars in servers and datacenters. On Tuesday, the Nikkei reported that TSMC fired several employees suspected of trying to obtain critical information on 2-nanometer chip development. That next-generation semiconductor process is entering mass production in the second half of this year. Local investigators also searched the Taiwanese premises of Japanese supplier Tokyo Electron Ltd., the Financial Times reported. Company representatives declined to comment. TSMC has taken disciplinary action against personnel involved and initiated legal proceedings, the company said in a statement without elaborating. It conducted an internal investigation and identified the issue 'early,' the firm added in its statement. The case shines a spotlight on TSMC, one of the companies at the heart of the global infrastructure boom. Investment in chipmaking development is at an all-time high, as TSMC and closest rival Samsung Electronics Co. set aside more than $30 billion in annual capital expenditures, while US and Chinese companies vie to develop the most advanced technology. China's progress has stalled several generations behind TSMC, with Huawei Technologies Co. and Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. now fabricating silicon at 7nm. In the US, Intel Corp. is at a more advanced stage. --With assistance from Mayumi Negishi, Peter Elstrom and Takashi Mochizuki. More stories like this are available on

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store