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S. Korea's plan to reduce suicide rate
Mon, Sep 01, 2008
AFP

SEOUL - SOUTH Korea's government is working on a package of measures to reduce the country's high suicide rate, officials said Monday.

The health and welfare ministry said 10 government agencies were involved in the first inter-ministerial initiative.

A plan to be submitted on Wednesday focuses on creating a social and economic safety net for low-income families and the old, a welfare ministry official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

Among short-term measures, the government will expand the number of platform screen doors to stop people jumping under subway trains and step up support for counselling centres.

It also plans to tighten regulations on the purchase of pesticides often used for suicide and to block access to websites encouraging suicide.

Operators of such websites face punishment but many have dodged government supervision by changing the wording or the address of their pages.

The suicide rate hit a record high for Korea in 2005. It was number one among Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development member nations in 2006, with 21.5 in every 100,000 South Koreans killing themselves.

The trend is rising especially among the old, with 72.1 out of 100,000 senior citizens killing themselves in 2006 compared to 28.6 in 1996.

Officials say lack of preparation for an ageing society, rapid changes in social conditions, financial hardship and illness prompt senior citizens to take their own lives. -- AFP

 

 
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