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A man demonstrates a toothpick crossbow in Changchun, in China’s northeast Jilin province.
A man demonstrates a toothpick crossbow in Changchun, in China’s northeast Jilin province. Photograph: STR/AFP/Getty Images
A man demonstrates a toothpick crossbow in Changchun, in China’s northeast Jilin province. Photograph: STR/AFP/Getty Images

Forget fidget spinners, it's the toothpick crossbow that is worrying parents

This article is more than 6 years old

New toy taking China by storm can fire needles and nails as well as toothpicks, leading to concerns over safety

Handheld mini-crossbows that can fire needles and nails are the latest must-have toy in China but anxious parents want them banned before a young child gets blinded or worse.

Selling online and in shops for as little as seven yuan ($1), so-called toothpick crossbows were originally designed to shoot out just that – toothpicks.

But if swapped out for needles they are potent enough to crack glass, said the Shanghai Daily newspaper, quoting shop owners as saying they were selling out of the gadgets fast.

Other Chinese state media said the mini crossbows can fire projectiles a distance of more than 20 metres and shoot iron nails in place of toothpicks.

The Shanghai Daily said: “The ‘toothpick crossbow’ toy has spread across China like wildfire among the nation’s primary and middle school children.”

“The unusual shooting toy may be very small but it is powerful enough to puncture a balloon and pierce cardboard. And when the toothpick is swapped for a metal needle it becomes a dangerous weapon.”

Handheld crossbows that can fire out needles and nails are the latest must-have toy in China but anxious parents want them banned before a young child gets blinded or worse. Photograph: STR/AFP/Getty Images

Police in Chengdu, a major city in China’s south-west, have reportedly stopped sales of the product and concerned parents across the country want the government to issue a nationwide ban.

One parent wrote on Weibo, China’s equivalent to Twitter: “Hurry up [and ban them], pupils do not understand and are just shooting people for fun. It will cause accidents sooner or later.”

Another worried observer wrote: “Our primary school began to investigate this from Monday and they’re very dangerous.”

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