四川富顺:学校食堂出现烂肉臭排骨 数百家长围学校堵政府(2025.06.23)

「四川富顺:学校食堂出现烂肉臭排骨 数百家长围学校堵政府(2025.06.23)」6月23日,四川省自贡市富顺县华英实验学校的数百名学生家长发起抗议行动,围堵学校大门并前往县政府表达不满。抗议的起因是家长在学校食堂查获了发臭的排骨、病猪肉以及腐烂蔬菜等变质食材。

据多位家长透露,此次抗议并非偶发事件。早在数日前,已有学生陆续出现呕吐、腹泻、腹痛等疑似食物中毒症状,引起家长警觉。部分家长开始在校外蹲守,希望查明真相。6月23日上午7点40分左右,家长在学校食堂截获了部分发臭的排骨、病猪肉等变质食材,并拍下视频上传到网络。视频在社交媒体上迅速传播,数百学生家长闻讯后迅速聚集到学校食堂外,要求校方给他们一个说法。

尽管校方辩称问题食材尚未通过验收程序,家长们表示,学校规定的验收时间是当天早上7点半,而他们发现问题食材的时间是7点40,显然已超过验收时限。此外,有家长指出,十多年前该校曾曝出类似事件,最终却不了了之。另外,家长们还在一辆专门为学校运送食材的货车上查获了大量劣质食材,据悉,该配送公司同时为20家学校供应食材。他们还注意到,教师和学生食用的肉类并不相同,教师所用肉质明显更新鲜,这一不平等对待进一步激化了家长的不满。

当天中午,家长们又先后在学校门口及富顺县政府前聚集,要求严查学校后勤供餐问题,并对相关责任人追责。在社会压力下,当地政府组织教育局、市场监管局等部门与部分家长代表会面。但据多名在场人士反映,官方回应“避重就轻”,仅称需进一步检测才能确认食材是否变质,拒绝就校方责任作出明确表态或处罚。

与此同时,多名在现场通过网络直播事件进展的家长,在直播过程中被平台封禁账号,还有政府官员在抗议现场威胁家长不要拍视频上传到社交网络。

目前,事件仍在持续发酵中。家长群体表示将继续维权,要求彻查学校食堂采购与监管体系,追究校方与相关监管部门的责任。

去年六月至今,“昨天”频道便记录了三起由学校食堂提供变质食物所引发的学生家长抗议事件,分别是云南昆明长丰学校“僵尸肉”事件、浙江宁波余姚市姚北实验学校小学“活蛆”事件、以及四川内江天立国际学校学生食物中毒事件。此类事件在中国层出不穷,根本原因是中共政权无处不在的腐败导致对食品安全的监管流于形式。

“Fushun, Sichuan: Rotten Meat and Stinky Ribs Found in School Cafeteria, Hundreds of Parents Protest at School and Government Office (2025.06.23)”

On June 23, hundreds of parents of students at Huaying Experimental School in Fushun County, Zigong City, Sichuan Province, launched a protest, blocking the school gates and marching to the county government to express their outrage. The protest was triggered by the discovery of spoiled food in the school cafeteria, including foul-smelling ribs, meat from diseased pigs, and rotting vegetables.

According to several parents, this incident was not isolated. Days earlier, students had begun exhibiting symptoms of suspected food poisoning, such as vomiting, diarrhea, and stomach pain, which raised alarm among families. Some parents began keeping watch outside the school to uncover the truth. At around 7:40 a.m. on June 23, parents intercepted a batch of spoiled ribs and other tainted food inside the school cafeteria and recorded videos that quickly went viral on social media. In response, hundreds of parents gathered outside the cafeteria demanding an explanation from the school.

Although school officials argued that the problematic food had not yet passed inspection, parents pointed out that the official inspection time was set for 7:30 a.m., and the spoiled food was discovered at 7:40 a.m.—clearly past the deadline. Some also recalled that the school had been embroiled in a similar scandal over a decade ago, which ended without resolution. Additionally, parents discovered large quantities of low-quality food on a truck that regularly delivered supplies to the school. The delivery company reportedly provides food to 20 schools in the area. Parents also noticed that the meat served to teachers was significantly fresher than that given to students, further fueling public anger over such blatant inequality.

By midday, the protest had expanded to both the school gate and the Fushun county government building, with parents demanding a full investigation into the school’s catering system and accountability for those responsible. Under mounting public pressure, local authorities arranged a meeting between parents and officials from the education bureau and the market regulation bureau. However, many participants reported that officials dodged key issues, stating only that further testing was needed to determine whether the food was spoiled, and refused to address the school’s responsibility or impose any penalties.

Meanwhile, several parents who were livestreaming the protest online had their accounts suspended mid-broadcast. Government officials at the scene also threatened parents, warning them not to film or upload videos to social media.

The incident continues to escalate. Parent groups have vowed to keep fighting, demanding a thorough investigation into the cafeteria’s procurement and oversight processes, and accountability from both the school and regulatory authorities.

Since June of last year, “Yesterday” has documented three other parent-led protests sparked by unsafe food in school cafeterias: the “zombie meat” scandal at Changfeng School in Kunming, Yunnan; the “live maggots” incident at Yaobei Experimental Primary School in Yuyao, Zhejiang; and a food poisoning case at Tianli International School in Neijiang, Sichuan. Such incidents are alarmingly frequent in China. At their root lies the pervasive corruption within the Chinese Communist regime, which renders food safety oversight largely symbolic and ineffective.工具