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In February 2021, a tragic event occurred in Asahikawa, a city in Hokkaido, Japan. A 14-year-old girl was found frozen to death in a public park after going missing during a bitterly cold night. This heartbreaking case shocked many people across Japan and later became a national topic of discussion because of the events that led to her death.
The girl had been a student at Hokusei Junior High School. Soon after she entered the school in 2019, she became the target of severe bullying by a group of students. Some of the bullying involved emotional abuse, threats through messaging apps, and even the sharing of inappropriate photos. At one point, she was pressured to send explicit images, which were then spread among students, and she was later forced to do things against her will. One serious incident occurred when she was surrounded by a group of students and pressured to jump into a river. The police were called, but the students claimed the girl was abused by her mother, which caused confusion in the investigation.
Over time, the girl’s mental health worsened. She developed symptoms of PTSD (Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder) and had to be hospitalized and stay away from school. Despite moving to another area, she continued to struggle emotionally.
On the night of February 13, 2021, in temperatures as low as -17°C, she suddenly left home and didn’t return. Her body was found over a month later. The official cause of death was hypothermia (freezing), likely on the same night she disappeared.
This case raised many questions about how schools and local governments handle bullying. Initially, the incident was not reported widely in the media. But after a major news outlet investigated and shared the story, public attention grew. The girl’s family asked the school and city officials for answers, but for a long time, they were not given clear information or access to investigation reports.
Later investigations confirmed that the bullying was serious and long-lasting. However, some official reports hesitated to connect the bullying directly to her death. This caused frustration and pain for the family, who believed that the system failed to protect their daughter.
In 2024, after years of public pressure and new investigations, a final report officially recognized that the girl had taken her own life due to the severe bullying she endured. The city apologized, and the head of the education board resigned.
This tragic case reminds us how important it is to listen to victims, take bullying seriously, and act with care. It also shows how hard families sometimes have to fight to be heard—and how society must keep improving to protect its most vulnerable members.
https://bit.ly/43zuJvm
CC BY-SA 4.0
In February 2021, a tragic event occurred in Asahikawa, a city in Hokkaido, Japan. A 14-year-old girl was found frozen to death in a public park after going missing during a bitterly cold night. This heartbreaking case shocked many people across Japan and later became a national topic of discussion because of the events that led to her death.
The girl had been a student at Hokusei Junior High School. Soon after she entered the school in 2019, she became the target of severe bullying by a group of students. Some of the bullying involved emotional abuse, threats through messaging apps, and even the sharing of inappropriate photos. At one point, she was pressured to send explicit images, which were then spread among students, and she was later forced to do things against her will. One serious incident occurred when she was surrounded by a group of students and pressured to jump into a river. The police were called, but the students claimed the girl was abused by her mother, which caused confusion in the investigation.
Over time, the girl’s mental health worsened. She developed symptoms of PTSD (Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder) and had to be hospitalized and stay away from school. Despite moving to another area, she continued to struggle emotionally.
On the night of February 13, 2021, in temperatures as low as -17°C, she suddenly left home and didn’t return. Her body was found over a month later. The official cause of death was hypothermia (freezing), likely on the same night she disappeared.
This case raised many questions about how schools and local governments handle bullying. Initially, the incident was not reported widely in the media. But after a major news outlet investigated and shared the story, public attention grew. The girl’s family asked the school and city officials for answers, but for a long time, they were not given clear information or access to investigation reports.
Later investigations confirmed that the bullying was serious and long-lasting. However, some official reports hesitated to connect the bullying directly to her death. This caused frustration and pain for the family, who believed that the system failed to protect their daughter.
In 2024, after years of public pressure and new investigations, a final report officially recognized that the girl had taken her own life due to the severe bullying she endured. The city apologized, and the head of the education board resigned.
This tragic case reminds us how important it is to listen to victims, take bullying seriously, and act with care. It also shows how hard families sometimes have to fight to be heard—and how society must keep improving to protect its most vulnerable members.
https://bit.ly/43zuJvm
CC BY-SA 4.0