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A survey of Beichuan officials by the CAS crisis intervention center last year found almost 40 percent of cadres were suffering severe post-traumatic stress, while another 11 percent were depressed. Across the province, more than 2,500 officials who lost at least one relative have been transferred to either less demanding posts or richer regions, Sichuan News Network reported.
Zhang at the CAS has urged the government to create an agency to facilitate, manage and coordinate the long-term psychological rehabilitation of victims in Sichuan, as well as provide financial and policy support for the groups involved. A recent China Association for Promoting Democracy report also said: "Two decades on from the Tangshan earthquake (in 1976), survivors still illustrated significant levels of post-traumatic stress disorder."
Due to poor construction quality, many school buildings collapsed during the Wenchuan earthquake, killing thousands of students. Those who survived were left with serious psychological trauma and some have since abandoned education, say mental health experts.
Dong Ya, 19, a former student at the now-iconic Xuankou Middle School in Yingxiu, was transferred with her classmates to a school in Changzhi, Shanxi province, after the disaster. She returned home after graduating last November and is refusing to go to college.
"I don't want anything to do with school anymore," said the teenager, who lost three relatives and many more friends on May 12. "Some of my classmates are going to college. I don't get them."
Students and teachers at Beichuan Middle School, where more than 1,500 people were killed in 2008, are now reeling from another tragedy: the brutal murder of a student by his classmate.
Authorities say that, on the morning of Jan 4, 10th-grader Mu Zhipeng, 16, walked into a dorm room and allegedly cut Li Haolong's throat with a knife for no apparent reason. Although officials insist the boys were strangers, China Daily was told by anonymous police sources in Mianyang - the school's temporary base during reconstruction - and an aid worker at the school that Mu and Li did know each other and that the killing stemmed from a violent clash.
The incident sparked furious criticism in the media over the effectiveness of mental assistance offered to victims of the earthquake. However, Long Di, head of the CAS psychological aid program at Beichuan Middle School, blamed the country's ultra-competitive education system.
Students and teachers are so focused on obtaining better marks that it leaves them no time to "nurture hearts and connect to life", she said in an exclusive interview. "People at the school have been hostile to one another for a while."
Beichuan Middle School runs to a tight schedule between 6:30 am and 10:30 pm. Students in the 12th grade, which the CAS team is chiefly responsible for helping, have 13 classes a day - "a trauma in itself", said Long, who warned that without time alone to come to terms with the disaster, no amount of investment can help them to truly heal.
Seven of the 10 classes that made up what is now the 12th grade were wiped out when the earthquake hit, according to official statistics.
"There's so much pressure that people can't find ways to tolerate one another. Our schools are now competitive places, not places that offer support," said Long. "Most people (here) lack educational resources to begin with (compared with urban students), and after a trauma like this, they're bound to appear unconfident."