Chongqing shooting
LocationChongqing, China
Coordinates29°36′36″N 106°23′20″E / 29.610°N 106.389°E / 29.610; 106.389
Date5 April 1993
Attack type
Mass murder, mass shooting, murder-suicide, spree shooting
WeaponsHunting rifle
Deaths9 (including the perpetrator)
Injured3
PerpetratorChen Xuerong

The Chongqing shooting was a mass shooting that occurred in Chongqing, China on 5 April 1993. Chen Xuerong, (surname written as Chinese: ) a worker at the Chongqing machine factory, who was angered by a mistake on his timesheet, armed himself with a hunting rifle and searched for his boss with the intent to kill him, but upon finding that the latter was not present he shot dead three of his co-workers.

Pursued by security guards, Chen escaped the factory grounds by jumping over a wall, and once out on the street fired at a family of four passing by on a motorcycle with sidecar, fatally hitting a man and two women, and wounding the fourth. He next injured a soldier in a van, and then killed another man, on whose bike he fled. At a junction Chen stopped and hijacked a taxi, after killing the driver, and injuring his passenger, and eventually killed himself by driving down a 30-meters deep ravine, about 40 minutes after firing his first shots.[1][2][3][4][5][6]

References

  1. "El Mundo - China" [The World - China]. El Nuevo Herald (in Spanish). 1993-04-07. p. 7A. Retrieved 2023-12-03 via Newspapers.com.
  2. "Amokläufer erschießt acht Personen" [Gunman shoots eight people]. Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (in German). No. 82. 1993-04-07. p. 11. Retrieved 2023-12-03 via Frankfurter Allgemeine Archiv.
  3. "Pris de colère, un ouvrier chinois tue huit personnes" [Out of anger, a Chinese worker kills eight people]. AFP (in French). 1993-04-06.
  4. "Amokläufer in China erschiesst acht Personen" [Gunman in China shoots dead eight people]. Neue Zürcher Zeitung (in Swiss High German). 1993-04-07.
  5. "Worker kills 8". Asian Recorder. p. 23105.
  6. "重庆血案 狂汉连杀八人夺车坠崖毙命" [Chongqing bloodbath: a maniac killed eight people in a row and fell off a cliff to his death]. Lianhe Wanbao (in Chinese (Singapore)). China News Service. 1996-04-06. p. 13. Retrieved 2023-12-03 via NewspaperSG.
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