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Thousands of Wukan Villagers Again in Standoff with Police

By Tang Ming & Joseph Wu
Epoch Times Staff
Created: December 12, 2011 Last Updated: December 23, 2011
Related articles: China » Democracy & Human Rights
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More than 1,000 police in antiriot gear entered Wukan village in Lufeng county, Guangdong province, before dawn on Dec. 11, 2011. Police fired more than 50 rounds of tear gas and other ammunitions. Wukan villagers have staged several large-scale, well-organized, protests during the last few months against illegal land grabs and corruption by officials. (Photo provided by villagers)

More than 1,000 police in antiriot gear entered Wukan village in Lufeng county, Guangdong province, before dawn on Dec. 11, 2011. Police fired more than 50 rounds of tear gas and other ammunitions. Wukan villagers have staged several large-scale, well-organized, protests during the last few months against illegal land grabs and corruption by officials. (Photo provided by villagers)

Over 5,000 villagers, armed with farm tools, had yet another standoff with more than a thousand heavily armed police in Lufeng county, Guangdong province on Dec. 11. Police fired more than 50 rounds of tear gas and other ammunitions. The area has erupted in several large-scale, well-organized, protests during the last months.

Illegal land expropriation by local officials, embezzlement of compensation funds, and the arrest of four village representatives are reasons given by villagers and local media for the latest protests in Wukan village of Lufeng county.

According to a Weibo Internet post, on Dec. 8, twelve village representatives announced a list of illegally seized land sales by local authorities and the embezzlement of approximately 4.8 billion yuan (US$750 million) in compensation money. Authorities arrested four village representatives. All this inflamed villagers’ anger.

On Sat., Dec. 10, over 8,000 villagers took to the streets. They armed themselves with iron pipes and rocks, and carried many banners, which said: “Overthrow Corrupt Officials,” and “Return my Farm Land.” They also barricaded roads and demanded the release of their arrested representatives, saying they would otherwise defy authorities indefinitely, the Oriental Daily News reported.

Wukan villagers told The Epoch Times on the evening of Dec. 11 that one of the villagers, 42-year-old Xue Jinpo, had died from beatings while in police custody three days after he was arrested. Authorities said Xue died of sudden cardiac arrest.

According to Mr. Liu of Wukan village, before dawn on Dec. 11, police “sneaked into the village like ghosts” with police car lights off. After villagers became aware of them, the police used a loudspeaker, saying: “It is illegal to interfere with our public service. Put down your arms and welcome us to enter the village.”

The villagers responded with sneers and saying things like, “Who would believe your lies,” Mr. Liu said.

Several weeks previously, on Sept. 21, thousands of Wukan villagers protested the authorities’ illegal land expropriation in front of the city’s administration building. On the morning of Sept. 22, special police forces cracked down on them. Dozens of villagers were injured and taken to hospitals. But the villagers kept on defending their rights, staging several more rallies with thousands of residents participating, to demand the return of their land and the punishment of corrupt officials.

The sale and development of illegal land grabs provide Chinese authorities with large amounts of revenue while leaving farmers without a means to make a living.

During a previous Wukan protest, reported on by The Epoch Times, villagers have also voiced their frustration over manipulation of village elections. The village party secretary has held the post for more than 40 years without any change. Every time village elections are held, fake votes are used to falsify the outcome, and villagers have never seen genuine ballots, they say.

Read the original Chinese article.

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  • Anonymous

    I truly hope that the villagers win and that their protest strategy spreads across China.  It is time for the common people of China to have their voices heard, and it’s time for corrupt Chinese officials to be thrown in jail.  There is hardly an official in China who is not corrupt.  It is really a battle of the “haves” vs the “have-nots”.  The reason you don’t hear of the middle class joining the poor villagers is because anybody with money is bought by the communist party.  It is like loyalty for benefits for those who skim China for its wealth.  One day, this giant Ponzi scheme will come crashing down.

    • Anonymous

      This protest in Wukan could inspire mass uprisings in other part of China.  CCP lost legitimancy to almost 90% of the Chinese people, so the Wukan I hope maybe could inspire many part of China that include Tibet, West Turkestan, and Inner Mongolia to do anti-government protests.  After seeing how each protests in mid-east like Egypt, Libya, and Syria starts in a small village and suddenly turns into a nationwide uprising.  China can do it, I know most Chinese have anti-censorship software so they know what’s going on in the Mid-East and the democractic transition in Burma, it’ll inspire them to do the same thing. 

  • http://www.facebook.com/zwjie Zhang Wei Jie

    How much state fund have been using to suppress chinese citizen in this way ? When will this kind of shame stop?



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