I don't want to be the one to say this.... but it looks terribly fake.. and it's too grainy to tell for sure. Look at how the alleged "kid" falls. It falls like a rigid object, much like a motorcycle were to fall if a car tapped it. When you see people getting ran over, they don't tend to fall in that matter... even kids... Is there an actual story behind this maybe?
i can't see any fake about this clip, esp. the end but i found the story.
Chinese government official runsover a 3-year-old kid, the government people bribe chinese Police and government officials, so Chinese Police claim that its just a car accident.
After a series of fatal accidents caused by careless BMW drivers in recent months, the luxury car is getting called in China the perfect murder weapon of the rich and powerful. The latest incident, in which a three-and-a-half-year-old boy was run over several times by a BMW X6, was recorded by a surveillance camera and caused a storm in China’s virtual communities after the footage was posted.
On September 7, 2010 while playing in a residential compound in Xinyi of Jiangsu Province, the boy was knocked down and crashed by a reversing BMW X6. As the video shows, the car did not stop immediately but run over the boy’s body back and forth several times. After finally getting off the car–while it was still moving–and seeing the body, the driver walked away.
Saddened and angry, many refuse to accept the police’s initial explanation that no intentional killing was involved.
The following questions and doubts were raised concerning the car, the drive, and the investigation.
1. The BMW X6, with a starting price of a million yuan in China (around $105,000), boasts advanced safety features including front and rear cameras and ultrasonic sensors with alarms. Then, what made the driver so slow to realize that there was a boy behind and then under the car?
2. As life is cheap in China, to wound is often more "costly" than to kill for drivers on the road. The family of a poor peasant who gets killed by a drunken driver can get as little as $12,000 in compensation, as frequently seen across the country. And several cases have been disclosed in the past few years in which the drivers at fault ran over the victim a second or third time on purpose–to "make sure" he/she was dead rather than just wounded. And this BMW driver appeared to have done the same thing.
3. As the reverse lights of the BMW X6 can be seen on and off several times in the tragic seconds, the driver must be knowingly shifting gears to go forth and back. The car was not sliding due to carelessness or a slope.
4. After seeing the body, the driver did not call for help or police immediately but walked away. Why? Shouldn’t this letting-to-die be counted as a way of intentional killing?
5. As the full investigation is still underway, how did the police already know–as they told the media–that "the driver has no motivation or intention to kill"?
While in no position to judge what was really going on, we do see the angry mass have a point, or two.
For one thing, high-tech safety features could harm rather than help as they tend to make the driver less alert. For another, to show itself perfect in bed with the rich and powerful is a debased and silly attempt by BMW to maintain its upscale image in China.