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Another angry protest in China
By Carol Divjak
15 July 2005
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Social tensions in China are taking on an increasingly explosive
form. A riot by 10,000 people triggered by a car accident in the
city of Chizhou in Anhui province is the latest case to be reported.
Around 3 p.m. on June 26, a Toyota sedan hit a teenage student
as he was riding a bike. As the student and driver began to argue,
three men emerged from the car and along with the driver began
to beat up the student.
A group of taxi drivers tried to help the injured student,
insisting on compensation from the driver, who is the owner of
a local private hospital. In response, the driver ordered his
thugs to attack the taxi drivers with knives. He openly boasted
that, even if someone was killed, he would get away with the crime
by paying a bribe of 300,000 yuan ($US36,000).
Police arrived on the scene but only escorted the driver and
his thugs away. Onlookers were left stunned and angry. Many were
outraged at the arrogance of the driver and the indifference of
the police to ordinary working people. The incident reinforced
their daily experience of the contempt of the newly rich and officialdom
towards the lives of the poor.
Word of the incident soon spread to the working class suburbs
of the city and by 6 p.m. thousands of people surrounded the local
police station. They demanded the police hand over the driver
and his thugs, who at that stage had not been charged with any
offence, and then flipped over, smashed and torched the Toyota
sedan and three police cars.
Firefighters who arrived on the scene quickly fled when confronted
by the angry crowd. Police stepped in but were beaten back by
the protesters hurling rocks and firecrackers. Power was cut off
to the police station, windows broken and firecrackers were thrown
inside. The protesters looted a nearby supermarket, partly owned
by the Toyota driver. Around midnight, the provincial police chief
arrived along with 700 paramilitary police officers in full riot
gear and dispersed the protest.
In a press conference on June 28, the Chinese foreign ministry
acknowledged that a riot had taken place and would be handled
in accordance with the law. In reality, the police
unleashed a reign of terror. Martial law was declared and house-to-house
searches were conducted. The police arrested anyone without an
ID card, urban residential permit or work permit, especially targeting
rural migrant workers.
According to the Xinhua news agency, 10 people have been arrested.
The city government issued an emergency statement, declaring that
the protest was triggered by a few illegal elementsa
crude attempt to stir up hostility towards illegal
rural workers. Rural migrants to cities are required to hold a
special permit and are routinely treated as second-class citizens
by police and officials.
The angry eruption is a symptom of broad popular sentiment.
Chizhou is typical of many Chinese cities in poverty-stricken,
interior provinces such as Anhui. Unlike centres of economic boom
like Shanghai, Chizhou and its 1.54 million inhabitants have very
few opportunities.
The citys economy is largely based around peasant agriculture
and some remaining state-owned enterprises. Rural incomes have
stagnated. According to the city government website, only 6,080
of the tens of thousands of laid-off workers have found jobs last
year. The official unemployment rate in the city is 4 percentwidely
considered to be a gross understatement.
The riot in Chizhou is only one of many spontaneous protests.
A similar incident took place last October in Wangzhou city in
Sichuan, another interior province. A government official viciously
attacked a rural migrant worker who bumped into him in the street
triggering a mass protest involving tens of thousands of people.
A recent demonstration reported by Radio Free Asia occurred
on July 2 when more than 2,000 villagers stormed a local police
station in Sangshang township, Fushan city, in southern Guangdong
province. Protesters were demanding the release of four farmers,
arrested on June 30 over a land dispute. Authorities sent in 600
police to break up the crowd. One woman was seriously injured
and an American researcher filming the clash was arrested.
The land dispute dates back to 1992 when the village administration
sold off 12.4 square kilometres of farmland to the neighbouring
township behind the backs of farmers. When the township government
attempted to claim the land in March, the angry farmers stopped
the takeover.
At midnight on May 31, the township government dispatched thousands
of police and heavy vehicles to destroy crops sown by the farmers
worth some 8 million yuan ($US975,000). To head off a mass protest,
the police used two electronic jamming devices to disrupt local
telecommunications and set up roadblocks on major transport routes.
Now, as many as 200 farmers guard the land day and night, ignoring
threats that they would be forcibly removed if they remained.
Recently, in another confrontation between farmers and Chinese
authorities in Shengyou in Hebei province, six farmers were killed
and up to 100 others seriously injured. The protest, reported
in Peasant unrest continues
in China, was triggered by a dispute over land expropriated
by the local government for a state-owned Guohua Dingzhou power
plant.
A villager Niu Zhanzong managed to film the attack before he
was knocked down, his camera smashed and his arm broken. We
hope the central government will come and investigate. We believe
in the central party, but we dont believe in the local police,
he said.
The film, however, was posted on the Washington Post
website, provoking a nervous response from Beijing, which duly
sacked the local Communist Party boss and local mayor. A construction
contractor and 21 accomplices have been arrested for the killings.
Since then, the Hong Kong-based newspaper Apple Daily
has indicated that the incident may involve the highest levels
of Chinese bureaucracy. The man behind the efforts to drive the
farmers off their land may well be none other than the son of
Li Peng, the former Chinese Premier, who was directly responsible
in 1989 for ordering troops to carry out the Tiananmen Square
massacre.
Lis family is notorious for corrupt profiteering in Chinas
power industry, effectively running some major state-owned plants
as their private businesses. Lis son, Li Xiaopeng, is the
manager of the power station believed to behind the expulsion
of the farmers.
The possible link between the Li Peng family and the violent
attack on Shengyou farmers underscores the fact that, under the
banner of market reform, the Chinese bureaucracy at all levels
is accumulating private wealth at the expense of ordinary people.
The further up the chain one goes, the greater the profits being
accumulated.
In the 1990s, Beijing decreed that all provinces raise their
own finances through taxes on farmers and small businesses. At
the same time, provinces, cities and even townships are engaging
in a cutthroat competition for investment and so are engaged in
offering huge incentives to potential businesses. The net result
is a relentless assault on the living standards of working people,
already facing high levels of unemployment and poverty, and the
ruthless use of the police to stamp out any sign of opposition.
See Also:
Chinese president preaches
the need for "a harmonious society"
[12 March 2005]
New Year for China's rural
migrant workers
[22 February 2005]
Mass protests in China
point to sharp social tensions
[1 November 2004]
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