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Chinese police besiege town and cut of food supplies in bid to quell riots

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Chinese police besiege town and cut of food supplies in bid to quell riots

Thousands of Chinese riot police have besieged a village in the south of the country, cutting off supplies of food and water in a bid to quell a series of riots :angry::angry:

By Malcolm Moore, Shanghai

5:51PM GMT 12 Dec 2011

For months, the 20,000 villagers who live in Wukan, near Shanwei city in Guangdong province, have protested first at having nearly £100 million of their land seized and sold off by the local government, and then at the brutal tactics used by police to regain control of the village.

The latest protests began on Sunday, when police attempting to arrest a villager were repelled by villagers armed with sticks. The police fired tear gas before retreating.

At the same time, the local government brought the village's simmering anger to a boil by admitting that Xue Jinbo, a 43-year-old butcher who had represented the villagers in their negotiations with the government, had died in police custody of "cardiac failure".

Mr Xue was taken into custody last week and accused of inciting riots. Mr Xue was widely believed to have been tortured, perhaps to death, and his family were rumoured to have found several of his bones broken when receiving his corpse. :angry:

On Monday, around 6,000 people attended Mr Xue's funeral and photographs of the massed crowds paying their respects circulated on the Chinese internet. "We're very pained and angry at his death," said one villager who declined to be named. "He didn't commit any crime. He was just a negotiator speaking with the government, trying to get our land back. He was defending farmers' rights."


Meanwhile, more photographs showed thousands of Chinese police massing on the roads surrounding Wukan and villagers said that a blockade had been imposed. Villagers using the internet inside the cordon claimed that supplies of food, including rice were running low. "A lot of policemen are assembled outside the village," wrote one villager on Weibo, China's version of Twitter, who named himself as Charles Suen.

"The villagers are having a meeting and are preparing to break out this afternoon to petition the government again," he added.

"People cannot come in and we can't go out. We will not survive if the situation keeps going, as we have no food," said another villager to Agence France Press by phone. "We normally have to buy food from outside, but we are blocked, so we cannot buy it," he added.Last week, officials in the village were taken hostage for a few hours by angry villagers and the police set up roadblocks at the village entrance in response.

The clashes in Wukan began in September, when a government office was damaged by an angry mob. Around 400 police responded with brute force, beating some residents and allegedly killing one child.

In November, 4,000 villagers complained again, publicly, that no one had investigated the land grab at the heart of their unrest. The non-violent protests were allowed to unfold without an official response, a move that was praised at the time by observers. But the matter remained unresolved.

Zhou Yongkang, China's security chief, has warned that as the country's economy begins to slow down, protests are likely to flare up and officials should deal with complaints promptly to "remove" sources of potential conflict.



Chinese police besiege town and cut of food supplies in bid to quell riots - Telegraph

brutal suppressing of its innocent people by china :tdown: and its also the signs of growing unrest and instability in china
 
Family of dead Chinese protester dispute heart attack claim

Official explanation of Xue Jinbo's death in police custody dismissed by relatives, who believe he was beaten to death

Wukan-villagers-pay-tribu-007.jpg


Wukan villagers attend a meeting after hearing the news that protester Xue Jinbo had died in police custody. Photograph: Reuters

The family of a Chinese protester who died in police detention have rejected official claims of a heart attack and vowed to continue a bloody three-month struggle for their land.


Relatives said they were unable to prepare a funeral for Xue Jinbo – a butcher from Wukan village in Guangdong province – because police refused to hand over the body after showing them that he had died on Monday.

"They told us he died from a cardiac arrest. But that is not true. He has never had heart disease," said a family member who asked to remain anonymous. "There were bruises on his hands, feet and forehead. We believe he was beaten to death."

On Monday, thousands of villagers participated in memorial rites for Xue, who was detained the previous week and accused of inciting riots that have erupted sporadically in the village.

His supporters claim the 43-year-old was merely a negotiator in their claim against the Shanwei city government. Villagers say the authorities have illegally seized land worth close to £100m for development and have dispatched thousands of paramilitaries to lockdown the residents.

"The main streets are blocked. Some villagers have problems buying rice," said one resident. Access remains possible via back roads and the internet is working again after being blocked on Monday.

The case has generated strong interest among China's online community, but many critical comments on microblogs and chatrooms have been blocked. The Southern Daily newspaper noted that Xue's family disagreed with the police account of his death, which is being investigated by the Shanwei people's procurator, it reported.

The Wukan unrest began in September when a furious mob ransacked a government office, sparking a brutal response by police. Last month, 4,000 villagers demonstrated peacefully but the violence returned when police used teargas to disperse villagers armed with staves. Five locals were detained.

Guangdong – which borders Hong Kong – is one of the most industrialised and wealthy provinces in China, but it has also been at the forefront of violent protests over land.

The government has stopped issuing statistics on the number of "mass incidents" in China, but a recent study by scholars at Tsinghua University estimated there were more than 180,000 in 2010. :woot: :woot:Other academics say the figure is about half that.

Zhou Yongkang, China's public security chief, has warned that unrest may become more common in future as economic growth starts to slow. Meanwhile, Wukan looks set to remain a flashpoint. Roadside protest banners accuse corrupt officials of seizing land. Villagers say Xue's death only adds to their resolve. "We will not give up. All we want is justice," said a relative. "Before he died, Xue wrote a note saying 'there is no truth inside China'. I think he was right."

Additional reporting by Cecily Huang

Family of dead Chinese protester dispute heart attack claim | World news | The Guardian
 
RIP to the innocent chinese who is beaten to the death by brutal police as per his relatives.
 
China doesn't have active insurgencies like India, insurgencies that can definitely benefit from modern arms.

I bet this is just a fraction of the portion of people who had to suffer for the aspirations of the CCP .


180,000 in 2010 wow
Karma is gone bite back hard lol.

The CCPs survival lies in the hand of the economy ..if there economy goes; there in deep ****.
and after tht no one knows what will happen next.

Maybe hong Kong will take over.
 
Get over it indians, been to both China and india on numerous occasions, China is a much cleaner, safer, more prosperous country, this inferiority complex has to end somewhere.
 
Many Indians try very hard to convince us that demonstration in one-party China is not possible, blahblah.

Now those same Indians hilariously post Chinese demonstration pictures.

Is it IQ problem or illiteracy problem?
 
Many Indians try very hard to convince us that demonstration in one-party China is not possible, blahblah.

Now those same Indians hilariously post Chinese demonstration pictures.

Is it IQ problem or illiteracy problem?


funny that you cant even understand the point.......the reason we say that demonstrations are not possible is not because that people cant demonstrate but because every demonstration by the people is met with the people getting killed or suffering like this rather than the govt trying to solve the peoples problem..........you cant even understand such a simple thing and you question our IQ?...pity your hands that try to wash the chinese ...(er...wrong doings)
 
Many Indians try very hard to convince us that demonstration in one-party China is not possible, blahblah.

Now those same Indians hilariously post Chinese demonstration pictures.

Is it IQ problem or illiteracy problem?

or it could be something to do with Indian's intellectual dishonesty.
 
funny that you cant even understand the point.......the reason we say that demonstrations are not possible is not because that people cant demonstrate but because every demonstration by the people is met with the people getting killed or suffering like this rather than the govt trying to solve the peoples problem..........you cant even understand such a simple thing and you question our IQ?...pity your hands that try to wash the chinese ...(er...wrong doings)

end up like this demonstration in India?
 

this thread is about China and if you want to talk about Indian Police then there are already enough threads in this forum where you can comment on.................

all you can do to cover up your sorry *** is- by trying to turn this thread to an India bashing thread rather than feeling for the sad condition of that particular village....really shows how much value your posts(in other threads as well) can be taken with in general...
 
I bet this is just a fraction of the portion of people who had to suffer for the aspirations of the CCP .


180,000 in 2010 wow
Karma is gone bite back hard lol.

The CCPs survival lies in the hand of the economy ..if there economy goes; there in deep ****.
and after tht no one knows what will happen next.

Maybe hong Kong will take over.

Friend,

Its "1,80,000 " mass incidents in a single year not "1,80,000" people.

In simple words there were "1,80,000" mass protest against government in china in the year 2010.

If you calculate the number of chinese participated in those "1,80,000" mass protests it will be millions of chinese protesters. :woot::woot:
 

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