Search Directories - North America | Europe | UK | Australia | Asia | Get a Free Email | Trading Board | Free Classified Ads
 Submit Articles
 Author Login


Community News & Articles 
 
 World News
 Africa
 Asia
 Australia
 Central America
 Europe
 Middle East
 New Zealand
 North America
 South America
 United Kingdom
 India
 Caribbean
 
 Sports News
 Basketball
 Football
 Soccer
 Others
 Golfing
 Hunting
 
 Entertainment
 Movies
 Music
 Television
 Games
 
 Internet Articles
 Internet Design Articles
 Internet Marketing Tips
 Search Engine Help
 
 Fashion Articles and News
 Women Fashion
 Men's Fashion
 
 Health Articles and News
 Health and Beauty
 Diseases
 
 Social and Cultural Issues
 Wedding
 Dating
 Relationships
 
 Women Issues and Articles
 
 Business and Industry
 Real Estate Properties
 Travel and Holidays
 Insurance
 Loans
 Stock and Trading
 Investing
 Legal
 
 Weight Loss / Management
 
 Science & Technology
 Telephony and Voip
 MP3 and iPod
 Conferencing Calling
 
 Environment
 
 Finance and Business
 
 Home & Family
 Food and Cooking
 Crafts
 Decorations
 
 United Nation
 
 Men Issues
Search

World News : Asia Last Updated: Nov 5th, 2007 - 19:52:48


Video gives rare glimpse of bitter war between developers and China's poor
By David McNeill
Jun 17, 2005, 10:09

Email this article
 Printer friendly page
The world got a rare glimpse of the deadly, mostly unseen war between Chinese developers and the poor who stand in their way with the release of a harrowing video showing a murderous attack on villagers protesting against the construction of a power plant.

Chinese state media says 10 people were killed, some of them elderly, when hundreds of camouflaged men in hard-hats and armed with knives, guns and iron bars carried out a terrifying dawn raid last Saturday on about 300 people in a shantytown in Shengyou, in China's north.

One man told The Beijing News the attackers "rushed into the shacks and started pounding and chopping". Niu Chengluan, who suffered broken bones, told The South China Morning Post from his hospital bed: "Four people used iron bars with knives to beat me. They [tried to] beat me to death." The attackers concentrated on the men, but several women were hurt, including Huang Jinfeng, who said the men "attacked everyone they found".

The villagers, who had fought off an assault in April and captured one of the attackers, Zhu Xiaorui, reportedly retaliated with farm tools, but by the time police were called an hour later, six were dead and nearly 50 injured; four more have since died. The survivors are refusing to surrender their captured attacker, Mr Zhu, a Beijing club bouncer who was paid 100 Yuan (£6.60) for his day's work.

The villagers refused a compensation offer last July from Hebei Guohua Power, which wants to build a power plant on the 62 acre (25-hectare) site. Chinese internet bulletin-boards say the company had successfully negotiated with 12 other villages and was so frustrated by lack of progress with the final holdout that it filled five buses with hired thugs to clear the shantytown.

Local media were barred from covering the attack, but the story was picked up by media outlets in China's far south and a video recorded by a villager was handed to The Washington Post, forcing the government to act. The local party chief and the mayor have been sacked, and police are negotiating for Mr Zhu's release.

The video's release around the world brings more unwelcome attention for Beijing on the enormous social tensions created by China's explosive economic growth, which has brought riches for some but hardship and rising anger for millions of others. The right to organise is strictly curtailed, but unofficial strikes and demonstrations have grown rapidly in the past decade, along with attacks on government building and officials.

One government report said 3.1 million people took part in protests in just one month last year. Economic growth has also led to intense competition between land-hungry developers, who often clash brutally with the 140 million migrant workers in their march to progress. In October, 50,000 migrants rioted in Wangzhou city, in Sichuan province, after being forcibly cleared from their land to make way for the planet's largest construction project, the Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze River.

"The scale of the violence in this latest attack is unusual but the fundamental issue over land, especially in the suburbs, and the dynamics of land theft is not," said Professor Mark Selden, who has written numerous books about China. "It is one of the big unreported stories of our time."

Top of Page

Post an instant comment or a suggestion to the above article or news

Note: You can use the above link to form a new discussion forum, place your opinion and discuss events, politics, articles, environment, fashion, health, internet, search engines, marketing, movies, music, religion and any other topic.

Asia
Latest Headlines
» Thai protesters consolidate hold on airport
» Pressure mounts on Thai army to launch coup
» U.S. says troops kill 32 militants in Afghanistan
» North Korea readies border closing with South
» Afghan Taliban reject Karzai's safety vow
» Indonesia handling of Bali executions questioned
» Militants attack U.S. supplies in northwest Pakistan
» North Korea campaigns to show healthy Kim Jong-il
» Colombian army chief resigns after killings probe
» China reveals fresh sentences for Tibet unrest