A SCHOOL corridor should be where students worry about exams, friendships and the everyday struggles of growing up.
It should not be a place where parents fear what their children may encounter once they walk through the school gates.
But a series of disturbing incidents involving students, bullying and weapons has forced Malaysia to confront an uncomfortable reality — violence among young people is becoming a concern that can no longer be brushed aside as isolated cases.
In recent weeks, the country has been shaken by several incidents involving students and weapons, including the tragic death of a female student in Damansara following a stabbing incident, as well as other cases reported in Banting and Melaka.
Each incident will have its own circumstances. Investigations will determine what happened, who was responsible and what factors led to these confrontations.
But taken together, they raise difficult questions about what is happening among young people today.
How do disagreements and conflicts that may once have ended with words or minor confrontations escalate into situations where weapons are involved?
And more importantly, were there warning signs that adults failed to notice?

For years, bullying has often been treated as something children simply go through while growing up.
Many adults remember schoolyard teasing, arguments and fights as part of their own childhood experiences. Some were told to ignore it, be stronger or accept it as a normal part of school life.
But the environment facing children today is very different.
Bullying no longer ends when a student leaves the classroom. Social media has created another space where humiliation, threats and harassment can continue long after the school day is over.
For a child already struggling, there may be no place where they feel they can escape.
The worrying reality is that many bullying cases remain hidden
Some students choose silence because they fear being targeted further. Others worry that speaking up will only make things worse or that their complaints will not be taken seriously.
By the time adults realise something is wrong, the situation may have already reached a dangerous stage.
The recent incidents have also highlighted another uncomfortable issue — access to weapons and dangerous objects.
The question that needs to be asked is how easily students can obtain items that have the potential to cause serious harm.
Knives, cutting tools and other objects that may appear harmless in everyday situations can become dangerous when placed in the hands of someone acting out of anger, frustration or a desire for revenge.

This does not mean access alone leads to violence. But when combined with unresolved conflicts, bullying, emotional distress and a lack of support, the consequences can be devastating.
The response cannot only begin after tragedy strikes.
Calls for stronger security measures in schools, closer monitoring and stricter controls are understandable. Parents want reassurance that their children are safe.
Safety cannot be built through enforcement alone
The bigger challenge is prevention.
Are schools able to identify students who are struggling before they reach the breaking point? Are bullying complaints being handled seriously enough?
Do teachers have the support and resources to intervene? Are parents paying enough attention to changes in their children’s behaviour?
Schools today are dealing with challenges that go beyond academics.
Teachers are expected to educate, discipline and, increasingly, identify emotional struggles among students. But they cannot be expected to carry the responsibility of solving every social issue alone.
Parents, too, have a role to play. Changes in behaviour — a child becoming withdrawn, unusually angry, isolated or showing signs of distress — should not be ignored.

At the same time, the solution cannot simply be to demand harsher punishment whenever a violent incident occurs.
Students who commit violence must be held accountable. Schools must send a clear message that threats and attacks cannot be tolerated.
But punishment after an incident does not answer the more difficult question of how it was allowed to reach that point.
Behind every act of violence is a series of events that deserve closer examination — whether bullying was ignored, whether warning signs were missed and whether a young person had someone they trusted enough to seek help from.
The recent cases have shaken public confidence because they challenge a belief many Malaysians have long held: that schools are safe spaces for children.
That belief must be protected.
The question facing Malaysia now is not only how to respond when violence happens. It is whether we are prepared to recognise the warning signs before another student reaches a point where anger turns into an irreversible act.
Because by the time a weapon appears, the problem has usually existed long before. – July 10, 2026