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China says man who flew plane into Beijing skyscraper had mental health problems

4 articles
4 sources
0% diversity
Updated Yesterday
Key Topics & People
Liu *CITIC Tower plane crash Beijing China Zun

Coverage Framing

4
Human Interest(4)
Avg Factuality:77%
Avg Sensationalism:Moderate

Story Timeline

Jul 3 Morning

1 articles|1 sources
plane crashmental health problemsbeijingaviation controlpublic safety
Human Interest(1)
The Guardian - World NewsYesterday

China says man who flew plane into Beijing skyscraper had mental health problems

Chinese authorities have stated that the man who crashed a small plane into Beijing's tallest skyscraper, the China Citic tower, on June 26th was a 66-year-old with mental health problems. The pilot, identified as Liu, obtained a private pilot's license this year and took off from an airport on the outskirts of Beijing. During his flight, he deviated from the designated area, lost contact with the airport, and collided with the building, resulting in his death at the scene. Investigations concluded the incident was caused by personal reasons, with Liu reportedly suffering from chronic insomnia and anxiety and expressing suicidal thoughts in his diary. Thirteen people sustained non-life-threatening injuries in the crash.

MeasuredFactual
Negative

Key Claims

factual

A 66-year-old man with mental health problems flew a plane into Beijing's tallest skyscraper.

— Chinese authorities

factual

The pilot suffered from chronic insomnia and anxiety and had written about 'ending his life' in his diary.

— Chinese authorities

factual

The incident was concluded by authorities to be a case of endangering public safety caused by personal reasons.

— Chinese authorities

factual

13 people suffered injuries in the crash, none of which were life-threatening.

— Chinese authorities

factual

Chinese authorities were reluctant to acknowledge 'revenge against society' attacks and often describe perpetrators as isolated individuals.

— article's analysis

Jul 2 Morning

3 articles|3 sources
plane crashbeijingcitic towerpersonal reasonspilot anxiety
Human Interest(3)
Associated Press (AP)2d ago

Pilot who hit Beijing’s tallest building wrote about ‘ending his life,’ Chinese authorities say

Chinese authorities have concluded that a 66-year-old pilot, identified by the surname Liu, intentionally crashed a small plane into Beijing's tallest building, the CITIC Tower, on Friday due to "personal reasons." Liu's diary reportedly contained multiple references to ending his life, and he was described as having insomnia and anxiety, being divorced, and living alone. The pilot died in the crash, which occurred around 6 p.m. in the city's business district, injuring 13 others. None of the injuries are life-threatening. Liu had taken off on a solo flight after an initial flight with another person and deviated from his planned flight path. The incident left a hole in the building's glass facade and raised questions about security in the capital.

MeasuredFactual1 source
Negative
BBC News - World2d ago

China says pilot crashed small plane into skyscraper for 'personal reasons'

Authorities have concluded that the pilot who crashed a small plane into Beijing's CITIC Tower last week did so for "personal reasons." The 66-year-old pilot, identified by his surname Liu, was reportedly suffering from chronic insomnia and anxiety, and his diary contained references to ending his life. The crash, which occurred last Friday, resulted in the pilot's death and injured 13 others, one of whom has since been discharged from the hospital. The investigation determined the incident was a case of endangering public safety caused by personal reasons. Videos of the crash were widely shared on social media before being removed from the Chinese internet.

Mixed toneFactual1 source
Negative
South China Morning Post2d ago

China Citic Tower plane crash pilot ‘suffered from anxiety’

Authorities in Beijing have stated that the pilot of a small plane that crashed into the China Citic Tower last Friday had a history of anxiety and had written about "ending his life" in his diary. The pilot, identified as 66-year-old Beijing resident Liu, died in the incident. Liu, a divorced freelance worker, obtained sport and private pilot licenses in 2021 and 2024, respectively. He took off in a light-sport aircraft from an airport in the Pinggu district. The crash prompted China to suspend flight training nationwide.

MeasuredFactual1 source
Negative

Key Claims

quote

The pilot who flew a small plane into Beijing's tallest building wrote in his diary about 'ending his life.'

— Chinese authorities

factual

The cause of the crash was determined by authorities to be 'personal reasons.'

— Beijing's Chaoyang district government

factual

A small aircraft crashed into Beijing's tallest building, the CITIC Tower (China Zun), on Friday.

— Flightradar24, witness accounts

factual

The pilot, a 66-year-old man, died in the crash, and 13 other people were injured.

— Chinese authorities

factual

The crash left a hole in the glass facade of the 108-story CITIC tower.