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To: Mary Cluney who wrote (120836)6/19/2005 5:20:24 PM
From: Ilaine  Respond to of 793801
 
>>Chinese protest ends at dawn with screams, death

By Emma Graham-Harrison
Reuters
Thursday, June 16, 2005; 2:30 AM

BEIJING (Reuters) - Armed with pipes and shovels and wearing hard hats, the Chinese toughs shouted "charge" and waded into a throng of squatting farmers fighting to retain their land.

The skirmish lasts a few minutes and leaves at least one man down, an attacker flailing at his limp body with a pole, according to video footage obtained by the Washington Post of the clash in China's northern province of Hebei surrounding the capital, Beijing.

Moments later a bright explosion and what appear to be gunshots mark the start of a second charge. Screams and shouts of "Run!" and the villagers' stand crumbles.

The last shot ends frozen, the camera tilted to one side.

The footage, which the Post said was given to it by farmers, highlights one of a growing number of disputes over land rights in China, where protests take place daily and the top leadership places an overriding emphasis on the need for social stability.

About 58,000 protests took place across the country in 2003, according to a report in the Communist Party-backed magazine Outlook. The state-controlled media are barred from freely reporting on many protests, and details are often hard to come by. Video footage of a violent protest is rarer still.

Six villagers were killed and 48 injured, eight of them seriously, in the clash in Hebei's Shengyou village on Saturday, said the Beijing News, a state-sanctioned newspaper known to push the envelope in reporting. One of the attackers also died in the clashes.

The mayor and party secretary of Dingzhou city, where the village is located, were sacked.

China's leaders fear such protests might spiral out of control or, worse, channel anger over growing social inequality at the Communist Party, which has monopolized power since winning the Chinese civil war in 1949.

Many of the protests are by villagers angry that their land has been wrested away from them without adequate compensation, signed over by local government officials to businesses for development.

The villagers of Shengyou, 220 km (140 miles) southwest of Beijing, were in a dispute with local officials over their land to be used by a state-owned power plant, the Beijing News said.

Since 2003, the villagers have refused compensation from the firm, Hebei Guohua Power, which plans to build a storage facility for coal cinder on the land, the newspaper said. They have been squatting on the property, living in tents, ever since.

HARD HATS

Tensions heightened in April when 20 youths attacked the villagers in the middle of the night to try to force them off the land, the Beijing News said. Villagers captured one man, Zhu Xiaorui, 23, who said he had been paid 100 yuan ($12) to beat people up, it said. He did not say who had paid him.

The villagers had held him in shackles since. The Washington Post reported that Zhu appeared frightened but healthy and said the villagers had treated him kindly.

Then came Saturday's attack near dawn. Scores of men, some wearing army fatigues and construction hard hats, charged in swinging poles, shovels and hoes at the villagers.

They surged across between makeshift tents as some villagers hurled stones or clods of earth. Bangs like gunshots or firecrackers can be heard in the video.

About two minutes into the footage, there is a bright explosion, followed by what sound like more gunshots. Villagers flee as the camp is overrun.

The villager who shot the footage suffered a broken arm in the fighting, the Post said.

The provincial chief of police and forensic experts went to the area on Wednesday to negotiate with the villagers and perform autopsies, it said.

The villagers agreed to release Zhu after meeting the newly appointed party secretary of Dingzhou, who offered relatives 50,000 yuan for each of those killed, it said.

The tensions in Shengyou are playing out in many parts of China. On Thursday, villagers in a northern Beijing suburb blocked a road leading to their land, which they say has been taken unfairly from them to build an Olympic venue.

So far, the events unfolding in that village have yet to explode into violence.
washingtonpost.com



To: Mary Cluney who wrote (120836)6/19/2005 5:21:52 PM
From: Ilaine  Respond to of 793801
 
>>Chinese Peasants Attacked in Land Dispute - At Least 6 Die as Armed Thugs Assault Villagers Opposed to Seizure of Property

By Philip P. Pan
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, June 15, 2005; A12

SHENGYOU, China -- Hundreds of men armed with shotguns, clubs and pipes on Saturday attacked a group of farmers who were resisting official demands to surrender land to a state-owned power plant, witnesses said. Six farmers were killed and as many as 100 others were seriously injured in one of China's deadliest incidents of rural unrest in years.

The farmers, who had pitched tents and dug foxholes and trenches on the disputed land to prevent the authorities from seizing it, said they suspected the assailants were hired by corrupt local officials. They said scores of villagers were beaten or stabbed and several were shot in the back while fleeing.

Reached by telephone, a spokesman for the provincial government said he could not confirm or discuss the incident. "So far, we've been ordered not to issue any information about it," he said.

Large contingents of police have been posted around Shengyou, about 100 miles southwest of Beijing, but bruised and bandaged residents smuggled a reporter into the village Monday and led him to a vast field littered with abandoned weapons, spent shell casings and bloody rags. They also provided footage of the melee made with a digital video camera.

Despite the attack, the farmers remained defiant and in control of the disputed land. They also occupied the local headquarters of the ruling Communist Party, where they placed the bodies of six of their slain compatriots. A crowd of emotional mourners filled the courtyard outside; hanging over the front gate was a white flag with a word scrawled in black ink: "Injustice."

Residents said party officials abandoned the building and fled town, apparently because they feared they would be blamed for the killings.

"We want to know who gave the orders, who sent them to attack us," said Niu Zhanzong, 50, a bald, wiry farmer who made a video of part of the battle before men knocked him down, smashed his camera and broke his arm. "We hope the central government will come and investigate. We believe in party central, but we don't believe in the local police."

The seizure of farmland by local officials to build roads, dams, factories and other projects, often for personal profit, has emerged as an increasingly volatile issue in the Chinese countryside, where the government owns all land and gives farmers only long-term leases. Peasants often complain they are unfairly compensated when officials confiscate their plots, and have staged hundreds of protests over the issue in recent years.

The incident in Shengyou, a wheat- and peanut-farming village in central Hebei province, was unusual because the men sent to suppress the peasants appeared to be hired thugs rather than police, and because the conflict resulted in so many casualties.

Residents said the men arrived in six white buses before dawn, most of them wearing hard hats and combat fatigues, and they struck without warning, repeatedly shouting "Kill!" and "Attack!" Police failed to respond to calls for help until nearly six hours later, residents said, long after the assailants had departed.

Access to firearms is strictly regulated in China, but villagers said the men fired on them with hunting shotguns and flare guns. They also wielded metal pipes fitted with sharp hooks on the end. Because of the preparation, residents suggested the men might have ties to organized crime groups working with local officials.

The attack was first reported Monday in the Beijing News, a state-run tabloid known for testing party censors. The paper said one of the assailants died in the clash, and reported that authorities have already dismissed the party chief and mayor of the nearby city of Dingzhou, which governs Shengyou.

Officials in Dingzhou declined to answer questions, and managers of the Hebei Guohua Dingzhou Power Plant did not return phone calls.

Villagers said they began camping on the disputed land in the fall of 2003, after the plant announced that it would build a facility there for storing coal ash. Twelve villages surrendered land for the project, but peasants in Shengyou refused to give up their 67 acres. The plant agreed to pay them about $1,800 per acre, but residents said the offer did not meet national guidelines. They also accused local officials of stealing some of the money and demanded a full accounting.

Instead, Dingzhou police began harassing the village, detaining its leaders and once going so far as to surround the town in what residents said was an attempt to cut off food and water shipments. The farmers responded by digging in to block construction and keeping a 24-hour watch on the land, even through the winter.

The standoff appears to have to caused serious problems for the power plant, which the provincial government describes as one of its most important projects. A party newspaper said last year that the land dispute could force parts of the plant to shut down.

Two months ago, a group of 20 young toughs attempted to chase the farmers off the land, but the villagers fought back, captured one of the men and refused orders from party officials to hand him over to local police, residents said. Instead, they kept him in a pit.

During Saturday's attack, some of the assailants appeared to be searching for the man, witnesses said. Farmers later moved him to a shed in the party headquarters and allowed a reporter to speak to him.

The man, Zhu Xiaorui, 23, appeared frightened but healthy, although his ankles were shackled. He said he had been recruited by a man he met at the Beijing nightclub where he worked. He said he was taken to the village, given a metal pipe and told to "teach a lesson" to the farmers, and was promised $12 for the job.

"The villagers have treated me kindly," Zhu said, tears in his eyes. He added that he did not want to be turned over to Dingzhou police because he was afraid they would kill him for confessing to the farmers.

Across from Zhu's cell, the bodies of the slain villagers lay in separate rooms with shrines of candles and incense in front of their coffins. Occasionally, family members in the courtyard rushed forward, wailing, and the crowd struggled to hold them back.

Relatives identified the victims as Niu Zhanbao, 46, a pig farmer who suffered a fatal gunshot wound to his back; Hou Tongshun, 56, a father of three who was struck in the chest by a hook; Niu Shunlin, 26, a migrant worker who was both shot and stabbed; Niu Chengshe, 49, who suffered a fatal blow to the head; and Zhao Yingzhi, 50, who suffered multiple wounds.

Niu Tongyin, 62, one of the leaders of the farmers' movement, bled to death from a stab wound. His body lay in the Party Members' Activity Room, under portraits of Mao, Stalin, Lenin, Marx and Engels.
washingtonpost.com



To: Mary Cluney who wrote (120836)6/19/2005 5:26:37 PM
From: Ilaine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793801
 
>>Detained Chinese Migrants Attempt Suicide in Australia

SYDNEY -- Fearing they would be deported, more than a dozen Chinese nationals detained in Australia for immigration violations slashed their wrists and other body parts in an attempted suicide on Saturday, refugee advocates said.

Australia's Immigration Department said that 13 detainees had inflicted "self-harm" but said no deaths had occurred. It did not give details of the incident at the Villawood immigration detention camp in Sydney.

Prime Minister John Howard said on Friday his government was looking at ways to speed up rulings on immigration applications.
washingtonpost.com



To: Mary Cluney who wrote (120836)6/20/2005 11:43:32 PM
From: Ilaine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793801
 
>>Rape in China: A 3-Month-Long Nightmare for 26 Schoolgirls
By JIM YARDLEY

XINJI, China - The teacher always sent a girl to buy his cigarettes. He left the class unsupervised and waited in his office. When the girl returned to class with flushed cheeks and tousled hair, the other students said nothing.

For nearly three months the teacher, Li Guang, raped 26 fourth- and fifth-grade girls in this rural village, parents and court officials say. Some girls were raped more than once as Mr. Li attacked them in a daily rotation. He was found out when a 14year-old refused to go to school for fear that the next morning would be her "turn." She did not want to be raped a third time.

"School is where our children learn," said Cheng Junyin, the mother of the 14-year-old. "We thought it was the safest place for them."

It is the sort of horrific case that in many countries would be a national scandal but in China has disappeared into the muffled silence of state censorship. That silence matches the silence at the heart of the case: the fact that students considered a teacher so powerful that they did not dare speak out.

Indeed, even as the conventions of Chinese society are being shaken by the tumult of modernization, the Confucian reverence of teachers remains strong, particularly in isolated areas like this farming village in Gansu Province in western China. Parents grant teachers carte blanche, some even condoning beatings, while students are trained to honor and obey teachers, never challenge them.

"The absolute authority of teachers in schools is one of the cultural reasons that teachers are so fearless in doing what they want," said Yang Dongping, a leading expert on China's education system.

Yet modernization has helped drive many teachers away from the poorest areas like Gansu. Low pay in rural areas and better opportunities in cities have caused teacher shortages in many poor areas. One study found that 35 percent of village teachers leave within three years.

Poorer schools are left to hire cheaper teachers, many of them only marginally qualified, a trend that has coincided with a string of sexual abuse cases. Mr. Yang believes that rapes are rare, far less common than beatings, but he noted that in 2003 the Education Ministry published a list of 10 cases in which teachers had raped students.

In December 2003 a teacher in rural Shaanxi Province was executed for raping 58 girls in 15 years. Last October a teenage girl in rural central China tried to commit suicide after a teacher forced her to watch him rape her cousin.

Mr. Li, 28, may go on trial by the end of June, according to a court official in Dingxi, the city where the case will be heard. If he is convicted he will face a prison term of at least 10 years, or possibly the death penalty.

Local education officials as well as prosecutors refused to be interviewed about the case, other than to confirm that the trial would be forthcoming. China's state-controlled news media have remained silent, except for a short initial newspaper article that reported Mr. Li's arrest.

But a visit to this village found families who vented their anger at such a violation of trust. The village is nearly six hours from the provincial capital, Lanzhou, the last three hours on a dirt road through the mountains. The hilltop ruins of old fortifications are reminders that clans once ruled this remote land. .

Farming is the primary livelihood, although it provides only subsistence for some families, who often delay sending a child to school to avoid the fees. Girls are usually the first to be kept home, and some do not start school until age 9 or 10. Mr. Li's fourth-grade class had about 50 pupils, of whom about 26 were girls, with ages ranging from 10 to 14. In all, the school has more than 900 students, drawn from nearby villages.

Zhang Shengxia, at 10, was one of the youngest girls in Mr. Li's fourth-grade class and, as it happened, one of the luckiest. She said the rapes began last fall as the teacher selected girls, one after the other. The girls talked to one another about what was happening but did not dare tell anyone else.

Inside the classroom, Shengxia said, Mr. Li would sometimes physically abuse male and female students by ordering them to pile atop one another on his desk. "Even then," she said, "we were afraid to cry."

As the weeks wore on, Mr. Li either sent girls out for cigarettes or simply called them to his office every day. "When the teacher would ask a student, they would try to run away or yell out," Shengxia recalled. On the day he called out her name, she said, "He told me, 'Don't listen to all the bad things the other students say about me.' " He sent her outside for cigarettes, and she sprinted from school to her home. She was never raped.

"I was scared," she said. "I hate him."

"I hate the school," said Zheng Gaiguo, 40, the mother of a girl in the fifth-grade class. Her daughter is 14 and was raped once. "The teacher took my daughter to the office and told her: 'Do not be afraid. Your mother and your father are doing this.' "

The rapes lasted for almost three months, until the morning that Cheng Junyin's 14-year-old daughter refused to go to school. Word began to spread through the village, and other mothers began to hear horrible stories. Jiao Zhencai, 35, said her 12-year-old had been raped twice. Yet she said the girls had been too frightened to confront the teacher. Instead, Ms. Jiao said, some of the girls would share tips on how to escape from the teacher's office by picking the lock.

The precise details of Mr. Li's background remain uncertain. He grew up in Xinji and took his first teaching job in the village of Qingpu, a few hours away. He later returned to his hometown for a job at the local primary school. Villagers say his cousin worked as director of instruction, a connection they say was essential in helping him land the job.

"Anybody who has connections in the government can become a teacher, whether they go to college or just some vocational school," said Tian Ziming, 40, an uncle of the young girl, Shengxia, who was not raped. "It is not difficult to get a certificate."

The authorities will not release information about Mr. Li, but some villagers say he is also being investigated for possible rapes at his school in Qingpu. Nine other teachers were removed from the village school here, including Mr. Li's cousin and the headmaster. No explanation was given as to why so many teachers were removed.

In the conservative culture of rural China, the shame of rape has been devastating for many families. Some have refused to talk to prosecutors or get involved in the case. Others fear that their daughters will be forever damaged, not the least when they reach marrying age and may be stigmatized.

Ms. Jiao, the mother whose daughter was raped twice, may have the most difficult time forgetting what has happened. Her neighbors are Mr. Li's parents. She said they had gone to her home after their son had been arrested and warned her not to talk about the case.

"His parents came here and asked me, 'How many people know about this?' " Ms. Jiao. "I said, 'All the kids in school know about this.' "

She said she then told them: "Everybody has children. What if this had happened to you?"

nytimes.com