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Comment Central: Does the internet cause copycat suicides?
The MP who represents the town where at least seven teenagers have committed apparent copycat suicides has criticised social networking sites for creating a "virtual world" where actions appear to have no consequences.
Madeleine Moon, the Bridgend MP, urged friends of suicide victims not to go online but to seek professional help, after the death of Tasha Randall, 17, last Thursday, who was the latest teenager in a group of friends to commit suicide.
Her death has alarmed parents, health authorities and police, who believe that the suicides may be prompted by messages on social networking sites such as Bebo.
Within days, two 15-year-old girls, both of whom had known Tasha, had also tried to take their lives. Police have since visited the families of 20 of Tasha's friends, urging them to keep an eye on their daughters.
Copycat suicides are a well-known phenomenon – with research proving a connection between reports of suicide in the media and a spate of deaths – but, in Bridgend, the tributes left on Bebo appear to have had a significant impact. Friends have set up memorial pages where well-wishers have posted messages, or bought virtual 'tablets' in a remembrance wall.
The tablets on Tasha's memorial page include the messages 'RIP chick,' 'Sleep Tight Princess' and 'Sweet dreams, Angel.'
Claiming that the spate of suicides "defies belief," Ms Moon told Times Online that social networking sites were unhealthy for many young people.
"I have long wondered about all of these websites. People will post information, post photographs, they will post contact details that they would never have walked into a local pub and done themselves, but they will post them online to total strangers. That is crazy," she said.
"What worries me is that we have got a problem that we have had for some time in Bridgend, which is a problem with young male suicides. Friends of those people are, as a result, being confronted with a huge range of emotions of grief and loss for the first time.
"Instead of going to professional organisations and experts like the Samaritans to talk about those emotions, which are extremely harmful and can leave you feeling very confused about the meaning of life, they are going online and discussing these issues with friends and virtual friends who are not in the best position to advise them. Youngsters need to be given guidance on these matters from professional organisations."
She added that she was troubled by suggestions that the suicides may have been motivated in part by the youngsters’ ambition to feature on internet memorial pages.
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These kind of comments are offensive to all young people and all people who have ever suffered with mental health problems. Shame on you, Madeleine Moon & A. Smith.
It's so easy for some politician to blame something they know nothing about for something that happened to someone they never knew, as we discover with every teen suicide and every school shooting.
Using a social network will not make you kill yourself. Listening to "heavy metal" will not make you kill yourself or turn into a murderer. Playing computer games will not turn you into a murderer. Watching horror films will not turn you into a murderer.
Less blame, more solutions, please... and you might want to start with that atrocity you call Mental Health Services..
C. Titford, West Midlands,
I can't provide a coherent explanation for why it's right to remain alive, and neither can the Samaritans, MPs, or a policeman. None of us can convincingly solve the kind of knotty existential problems we face when we are "very confused about the meaning of life". We exist out of habit and because of hunches. Suicides (without obvious external motivation) should therefore be shrugged off and blamed on human ignorance in general, which is an eternal problem of immense proportions. It's rather revolting to see Madeliene Moon trying to tackle it by blaming the internet.
_Felix, Nottingham,
Knee-jerk bandwagonning from the press and MP's doesn't hide the fact that Bridgend is a small town - so people are more than likely to have known each other BEFORE going off to BeBo
Blaming the Internet is just stupid ..
drk, cadiz, spain
If they had communicated via texts , would we be condemning phones ? If they had sent letters , would it be the postmans fault ?
Benzo, Nr Chelmsford,
"It is absolutely bizarre to think that a memorial wall gives you a reason for ending your life...
"It absolutely defies belief."
Yes, it certainly does. It seems likely, in fact, that there are some other factors at work here - Wales' very high teen suicide rate does not seem correlated to Internet usage. The idea that kids are killing themselves to get memorialised on Bebo is just plain daft. Teenagers are young, not stupid.
Huw, Warwick, UK
As the Home Secretary feels that nobody should be out and about after 10.00 p.m., how are young people supposed to interact? Perhaps the government should also look at the virtual world they inhabit and reflect on the consequences of what they say and do.
David Leslie, Perth, Scotland
Absolute rubbish.
The only one who seems to be out of touch with reality is Ms Moon. Social networking sites serve no greater a danger to young people in this respect that personal contact would.
The reason these young people took their lives was because there was obviously no pro-active approach to care for them and counsel them through their grief. That is why they went to their friends for comfort, not because of the evil lure of bebo.
Open your eyes and start making some effective changes, not blaming all your town's problems on a communication tool.
D Stockton, Oldham,
I have been warning the authorities of the dangers of these sites for the last year.
They will only stand up and take notice when one of their children ends up dead!!!
A Smith, London, UK
She makes a reasonable point, but Ms Moon completely undermines her own credibility by referring to "this Bebo site". I know she's an MP, and therefore not expected to be a technical expert, but anyone even slightly familiar with the website would just call it "Bebo". What she's done is the equivalent of talking about "these Cow animals" when discussing a Foot and Mouth outbreak.
Maybe her advice will be taken to heart by some parents, and maybe it will do some good there, but any teenager who hears Ms Moon will simply roll their eyes at (what they will surely see as) another out-of-touch adult trying to lecture them. And I think that's a tremendous shame.
Neil, London, UK