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Excessive Force by China’s Street Police Triggers Outburst

Strangled vendor is latest incident to serve as flashpoint for smoldering public anger at regime

By Matthew Robertson
Epoch Times Staff
Created: August 2, 2011 Last Updated: August 6, 2011
Related articles: China » Regime
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MURDERED: Deng Qiguo, 52, pictured here after he was killed by urban management personnel in China on July 26. The disabled street vendor had sold fruit in the area for 10 years, and his violent end precipitated a mass riot against Communist Party authorities.

MURDERED: Deng Qiguo, 52, pictured here after he was killed by urban management personnel in China on July 26. The disabled street vendor had sold fruit in the area for 10 years, and his violent end precipitated a mass riot against Communist Party authorities.

After a one-legged street vendor was strangled to death by “urban management officers” in broad daylight in a small city in Guizhou Province last week, mayhem erupted.

The 52-year-old Deng Qiguo had been a familiar sight in the small city of Anshun for a decade, where he peddled fruit from his cart, which he pushed while hobbling on a crutch. An altercation with the street police—called “chengguan” in Chinese—ended in his death on July 26.

For many, the chengguan are the lowest-level representatives of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Their open disregard for human life in Anshun provoked an explosion of pent-up anger at the regime, drawing over 10,000 protesters who threw rocks at police and turned over police vehicles.

The authorities rolled out tried-and-true methods of crowd suppression, mobilizing nearly 1,000 riot police to put down the protest. Xinhua, the state mouthpiece, gave low-ball estimates of 30 protesters and 10 policemen suffering minor injuries.

But firsthand reports gathered on Sina Weibo, a Twitter-like microblogging service, and by Chinese-language media outside China indicate that police used fire hoses, tear gas, and possibly even machine guns. Cleaning trucks then came in to clean the blood off the road.

While the strangling (or beating, reports differ) took place in the early afternoon, crowds were still present late into the night.

‘It’s not just an issue of the vendor, but the system as a whole.’

—Zhong Weiguang

Social Media

Almost all of the firsthand accounts about the incident were published through microblogging platforms like Sina Weibo. While posts there were soon deleted, much of the video footage and images produced by witnesses were copied widely, including to Chinese-language websites outside China.

Wang Keqin, a well-known investigative reporter, followed developments closely. He referred to parts of an article in the Oriental Morning Post that had been deleted by censors. Someone in the crowd had said, in part: “It’s like a submachine gun. … I was not far from the bullets. When I saw him loading the gun, I thought they were loading the gun to shoot up in the air. I didn’t expect them to shoot people. Do you know? I didn’t expect that the first shot was firing toward us. We started to run.”

Liu Wei, a human rights lawyer, is recorded by Radio Free Asia (RFA) as saying: “The incident has grown bigger and bigger. It is out of control now. There were constantly sounds of gunshots at the scene, and tear gas is everywhere. It’s reported that anti-riot police tossed smoke grenades to disperse the crowd, and fired on them. Many people were injured or even killed. Now the streets are blocked by police. … Cleaning cars are cleaning the blood off the road.”

“There were so many onlookers,” wrote one user of Sina Weibo. “Blood and dead bodies were everywhere. The riot police rushed to the sidewalk. … The riot police kept on rushing to the sidewalk, and onlookers almost knocked me to the ground. The street-side stone bench was covered in blood; there were two corpses on the road.”

Recently, Chinese users of social media are reporting more aggressively on events that show the regime in a bad light, such as the riot in Anshun or the Wenzhou train crash. This, along with the proliferation of access to these technologies, is particularly concerning to Party apparatchiks, according to Zhong Weiguang, a Chinese dissident and commentator who now lives in Germany.

“This is coming out more and more now because of the Internet and Weibo,” Zhong said in a telephone interview. As connectivity among the population increases, people are able to see that individual phenomena are not isolated. At the same time, he said, “The conflicts that allow these things to happen are becoming more and more common, and the methods the regime is using are becoming more and more gangster-like.”

Covering Up

Anshun City government published a small note on its website acknowledging the death of the vendor. It was the first step in the Party’s efforts to cover up what really happened.

The local Party committee said they will “quickly investigate the facts,” “strictly deal with matters according to the law,” and “thoroughly do well with mass work.” This refers to propaganda saturation after “mass incidents”—large, violent protests that are suppressed by force—meant to restore disaffected citizens’ faith in the regime.

What local authorities would not permit, however, was an independent investigation of the incident. Lu Chaoguo, a reporter from the Shandong-based Qilu Evening News, attempted to conduct interviews in Anshun the day after the beating and was ambushed by public security forces.

He was approached by four or five men who declined to identify themselves. They grabbed him around the neck, pinned him to the ground, and then carried him to a minivan. He was then beaten about the head until he was unconscious. His cell phone and shoes were taken. Interrogations followed, and finally he was released with “bruises all over my arms and neck.”

Local newspapers, including the Oriental Morning Post and Guiyang Evening News, said at least a dozen people were in hospitals from some form of blast (possibly referring to tear gas or bullets), and that 30 were otherwise injured, the youngest being a 4-year-old.

Read more on how China street police are indoctrinated in brutality . . .






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