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China Human Rights

Villagers and Police Clash After Launch of Hainan Free Trade Port, Residents Say

Most conflicts are over villagers’ land being forcibly taken by provincial authorities without proper compensation, said one villager.
Villagers and Police Clash After Launch of Hainan Free Trade Port, Residents Say
A cargo ship loaded with containers berthed at a port in Haikou, Hainan Province, China on May 17, 2021. STR/AFP via Getty Images
Alex Wu
2/13/2026|Updated: 2/15/2026
0:00

Land disputes have resulted in a violent clash between residents and Chinese authorities in Hainan, after the Chinese regime designated the southern island province as a free trade port (FTP).

The action—which officially made Hainan Province a duty-free zone on Dec. 18, 2025—was an attempt by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to attract foreign investment amid a wave of withdrawals of foreign companies from China. The Hainan FTP is open to the outside world but closed off by a tariff barrier from other regions within China.

Instead of boosting the Chinese economy, the FTP launch has exacerbated problems such as land grabbing, unemployment, and rising prices, leading to widespread public discontent, according to local villagers. Analysts who spoke to The Epoch Times have also pointed out that it’s not a true free port under the CCP’s rule.

The most recent violent clash between villagers and police in the province occurred on Feb. 1 in the village of Daya in Lingao County.

A video of the conflict posted on a nonprofit rights website called Yesterday, which records group protests in China, shows riot police beating villagers with batons and shields and spraying them with pepper spray. Villagers respond by picking up stones and bricks. Amid the resulting chaos, several villagers can be seen suffering injuries and falling to the ground.

According to residents who spoke to The Epoch Times under condition of anonymity due to fear of reprisal, the villagers had staged a protest over the local government’s long-standing practices of forced demolitions, corruption, and unfair elections. After protesters intercepted a government vehicle to demand answers, authorities quickly dispatched a large number of police officers, special police, and government staff to the scene, triggering a conflict.

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“[CCP officials] demolished houses without compensation. [They] forced villagers to sign blank contracts, and then demolished their houses,” said one local villager, who used the pseudonym Li Feng.

Similar violent clashes over land disputes and forced demolition have occurred several times in recent years.

On Oct. 31, 2025, local residents said they were angered when a local branch of the Hainan Natural Rubber Industry Group illegally cut down villagers’ palm trees. People gathered outside the company building to protest, overturning vehicles and throwing stones at company personnel and riot police.
In 2023, local authorities forcibly requisitioned land in the city of Danzhou for the Tianjiaotan Water Conservancy Project. In April of that year, villagers protested what they called unreasonable compensation for the land, leading to a violent clash between police and villagers in which one villager died, as reported by the Chinese-language edition of The Epoch Times.

Land Disputes

Li said that almost all conflicts and disputes in Hainan Province revolve around land. “We can tolerate anything, but land is truly the bottom line,“ he said. ”Now, collective land has been taken back by the state. Are we supposed to live in the street?”

He said that Hainan’s management is chaotic, with village chiefs colluding with others—such as outside businesses and government officials from the mainland—to arbitrarily take away villagers’ land.

An aerial view shows buildings developed by China Evergrande Group for which authorities have issued demolition orders, in Hainan Province, China, on Jan. 6, 2022. (Aly Song/Reuters)
An aerial view shows buildings developed by China Evergrande Group for which authorities have issued demolition orders, in Hainan Province, China, on Jan. 6, 2022. Aly Song/Reuters

“Authorities are gradually tightening land policies. We can’t even apply for building permits for our own houses. Isn’t that considered land grabbing?” Li said. “Our ancestors worked so hard to reclaim the land, and now it has all gone to the state to develop and make money. We’re left to starve.”

Since the entire island of Hainan was designated an FTP in December, villagers have faced increased unemployment and higher living costs, he said.

Many local residents have also complained on social media and to The Epoch Times about sharply increased prices and low wages since the launch of the Hainan FTP.

“Now that it’s become a free trade port, there are many bandits coming to seize farmers’ land,” Li said, referring to CCP officials as bandits.

“Only when it’s become an FTP, the land becomes valuable. ... They take land from farmers and don’t allow them to build their houses.

“They are driving up prices, but the economy isn’t developing. Prices are high, jobs are hard to find, wages are low, rent is expensive, and life is stressful and tough.”

Vendors sell swimming accessories on Sanya Bay beach in Sanya, Hainan Province, China, on Nov. 26, 2020. (Tingshu Wang/Reuters)
Vendors sell swimming accessories on Sanya Bay beach in Sanya, Hainan Province, China, on Nov. 26, 2020. Tingshu Wang/Reuters

If the Chinese regime continues to treat people this way, Li said, the people will resent it, especially because the local population doesn’t have a strong sense of belonging to the Chinese mainland.

“If someone organizes a movement one day, the whole population will probably agree to kick the [Chinese communist] government off the island,” he said.

Gu Xiaohua contributed to this report.
Alex Wu
Alex Wu
Author
Alex Wu is a U.S.-based writer for The Epoch Times focusing on Chinese society, Chinese culture, human rights, and international relations.
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