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Chinese police massacre protestors in Guangdong
By John Chan
15 December 2005
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In a vicious attack on protesting farmers and fishermen in
the southern province of Guangdong, Chinese paramilitary police
opened fire with pistols and automatic rifles and killed at least
four people during two nights of clashes on December 6 and 7.
The bloody repression took place in Dongzhou, a community of 10,000
rural residents near Shanwei city.
Last weekend the Chinese government declared that three people
were killed and five wounded. Amnesty International, however,
confirmed the death of four and said up to six could have been
killed. Hong Kong media outlets quoted villagers saying that 20
to 50 were killed. Dozens of residents are still missing.
It is the first reported incident since the Tiananmen Square
massacre on June 4, 1989 that the Chinese security forces have
shot down demonstrators. The action appears to have been planned
from high levels of the government to terrorise not just the poor
farmers, but millions of workers throughout Guangdong and China,
by showing what they can expect if they take part in the countrys
growing protests.
The Dongzhou villagers were demonstrating against the lack
of compensation for land confiscated by the government to build
a power plant on a nearby hillside. Believing that local officials
had stolen the compensation funds, farmers have staged protests
outside the construction site since October. Local fishermen also
charged that the project would spoil fishing in a lake.
The state-owned Guangdong Red Bay Generation is building the
power plant as part of $US700 million government project to supply
electricity needs to the regions booming industrial and
urban development.
An article in the Washington Post on December 8 provided
a detailed account of the incidents. The violence erupted after
three village leaders went to the plant in the afternoon of December
6 to lodge a complaint. They were detained by riot police on guard,
and thousands of farmers gathered outside the site demanding their
release.
Police initially fired teargas to disperse the crowd but authorities
soon sent 400-500 more paramilitary and riot police as reinforcements.
These actions inflamed the situation, and thousands of villagers
again confronted the police. Officials claimed that villagers
used homemade explosives to attack the police, but according to
other reports, only firecrackers were involved.
Whatever the situation was, the ensuing police action can only
be described as a massacre.
The Washington Post reported: This time, according
to a villager who heard and saw what happened, police responded
to the launching of explosives by firing repeatedly very
rapid bursts of gunfire over a period of several hours Tuesday
and Wednesday nights. Some villagers reported seeing the Peoples
Armed Police carry AK-47 assault rifles, one of the Chinese militarys
standard-issue weapons. Another witness said: The
police kept on shooting until they drove away all the villagers.
In one particularly brutal episode, armed police chased six
men who attempted to escape from the violence by climbing a nearby
hill. Five villagers were killed. The survivor, who was wounded
in the leg, told a witness cited in the New York Times
on December 10 that they were first shot from afar. Then, at close
range, the police killed those who were wounded and unable to
move.
Similar clashes occurred the next evening on the villages
main road. A villager, Liu Yujing, said his younger brother was
hit by two rounds of bullets, one in heart and one in the bladder.
He died before getting into hospital.
After the two nights of shootings, the area was sealed off
by hundreds of police officers armed with submachine guns. The
families of some victims were unable to retrieve the bodies lying
in the streets. One witness cited by the Washington Post
said: I saw the bodies lying there. The family members were
afraid to go and get them.
A villager surnamed Chang quoted in the New York Times
said he saw three bodies in a local clinic and more on the scene
of the clashes: I went there and saw seven or eight bodies
lying there in a row, surrounded by many policemen, who were denying
the families attempts to claim the bodies. Another
witness, Li, said the police were trying to move the bodies elsewhere:
Some corpses were just burned in the crossroads of the village,
without allowing people to get close to see. Others said
they saw 13 bodies being thrown into the sea.
A villager surnamed Wei told Canadas Globe and Mail
in a telephone interview on December 11: We are desperate.
Some of us keep crying. We dont know what to do next. The
houses of our leaders were sealed today, and an increasing number
of people are being arrested and taken away. Nobody dares to lead
us now. There are rumours that tanks will come to flatten our
village ... please save us.
Local farmers have compared the massacre with the wartime atrocities
of the Japanese army in China during the 1930s and 1940s and with
Chiang Kai-sheks brutal dictatorship before the 1949 revolution.
After attempting to suppress news of the incident, the state-run
media was compelled to respond because of reports spread on Chinese
web sites and by Hong Kong and foreign media. The official Xinhua
newsagency claimed that 170 people led by troublemakers
attempted to attack the power plant with knives, bottles of petroleum
and fishing detonators. It became dark when the chaotic
mob began to throw explosives at the police. Police were forced
to open fire in alarm, Xinhua reported.
In the face of growing public anger, the Chinese government
announced it had detained a police commander who directly ordered
the shooting. The commander was not identified, however, and state
media defended the officer, saying the decision to open fire was
made under particularly urgent circumstances.
The large-scale operations involved, from the shooting to the
media manipulation, clearly show that the response was organised
within the governments upper echelons. One local Communist
Party official toured the area last Saturday and used a megaphone
to denounce the villagers as barbaric. We were
forced to open fire, he declared.
Amnesty International has demanded an investigation. Catherine
Baber, an Amnesty director, called the killings chilling.
She added: The increasing number of such disputes over land
use across rural China, and the use of force to resolve them,
suggest an urgent need for the Chinese authorities to focus on
developing effective channels for dispute resolution.
Behind the land disputes lies the growing market demand for
development sites. Beijing has designated the Dongzhou power plant
as a national level project and the parent company, the Guangdong
Yuedian Group, is controlled by the provincial government.
In order to attract foreign capital, the Chinese authorities
abuse the state-ownership of land to build infrastructure and
industrial projects on sites occupied by farmers. This has fuelled
a wave of protests, particularly in Guangdong provinceChinas
main export zone. Last year, 74,000 protests and riots were recorded,
involving over 3.7 million people.
In addition, the government is concerned that mainland workers
and farmers will follow the example of a recent mass protest in
nearby Hong Kong against the territorys Beijing-backed new
chief executive.
Deeper social tensions are building as well. An International
Conference of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) study released on December
8 before the World Trade Organisation (WTO) ministerial meeting
in Hong Kong, described China as rapidly becoming the sweatshop
of the world.
The study pointed out that only a small layer of private capitalists
and middle class professionals had benefited from Chinas
entry into the WTO. About 250 million Chinese were living on less
than $1 a day, and 700 million or 47 percent of the population
lived on less than $2 a day. Consequently, the people who
provide everything from T-shirts to DVD players to the worlds
consumers often have 60-70 hour working weeks, live in dormitories
with eight to 16 people in each room, earn less than the minimum
wages that go as low as $44 per month, and have unemployment as
the only prospect if they should get injured in the factories.
The massacre in Dongzhou also served to send a message to the
WTO ministers gathering in Hong Kong and to foreign investors
that Beijing will not hesitate to use the most brutal methods
to suppress working class unrestjust it did in Tiananmen
Square 16 years ago.
See Also:
Chinese government crackdown
exposes fraud of local elections
[30 September 2005]
Chinese government preparing
for greater social unrest
[6 September 2005]
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