Reporting from Beijing -- An angry crowd of 2,000 rioted in
northwest China's Gansu province over a government
plan to demolish a downtown area, torching cars and
attacking a local Communist Party office, injuring 60
officials, state-run media reported Tuesday.
At one point, rioters met a surging wall of armed police
officers with a hail of rocks, bricks, bottles and flowerpots.
The crowd later confronted police with iron bars, axes and
hoes as they tried to hijack a fire truck and smashed
windows and office equipment in two government
buildings.
The violence, one of the most marked instances of social
unrest to grip China in recent months, was sparked by
government plans to relocate the city of Longnan's
administrative center after May's devastating earthquake,
according to the Xinhua news agency.
State-run press has reported on numerous pickets and
demonstrations that have broken out across China in
recent weeks, including a two-day strike by disgruntled
taxi drivers in the southwestern Chinese city of
Chongqing.
Earlier this month, a crowd of 400 in the southern
boomtown of Zhenzhen threw stones and set fire to a
police car after officers tried to stop a motorcyclist at a
checkpoint. The cyclist fled and was killed when he hit a
lamppost.
In June, 30,000 people demonstrated in the southwestern
province of Guizhou, setting fire to cars and the local
Communist Party building following rumors that officials
had tried to cover up the death of a teenage girl.
Activists warn that tensions over the sudden downturn in
the Chinese economy could provoke similar public
outbursts, even though police have made efforts not to
immediately resort to violence in quelling the riots.
"The government's emphasis on maintaining a harmonious
society just extenuates the levels to which it is worried
about these kinds of threats to social stability," said
Joshua Rosenzweig, a Hong Kong manager of research
at the Dui Hua Foundation, a human rights group.
"I don't think we're even close to seeing the real impact of
the global financial crisis on Chinese society. I'd be
surprised if the government wasn't very concerned about
the increasing level of social unrest all over China."
Chinese economists say that rising wages throughout
China have led many laborers to expect better working
conditions and residents to demand more accountable
government. "The local government has become the front
line of conflict," said Hu Xingdou, an economics professor
at the Beijing Institute of Technology.
"But there is no channel to allow people to express their
will. They lack the right to speak, the right to organize and
unionize to represent their interest, therefore they can
only use an irrational way by demonstrating or rioting to
solve problems."
But government officials have recently began to forego a
decades-old policy of swift repression to meet public
demonstrations. Following a two-day strike, Chongqing
taxi drivers were able to air their grievances in a three-
hour meeting with government officials that was available
online across China.
And officials in Zhenzhen moved quickly to counteract
claims of police violence following the motorcyclist's death
-- promising compensation of nearly $30,000 to the
victim's family.
"In these cases, as well as labor and factory strikes, the
government policy now seems to involve much less police
response," said Rosenzweig. "Fewer labor leaders have
been detained and prosecuted for criminal offenses. There's much more emphasis on trying to mediate
disputes."
The melee in Longnan began when about 30 angry
residents gathered Monday outside the party office, but
the crowd soon swelled into the thousands, Xinhua
reported.
He Zhouwa, manager of a local machine brick factory,
said people were ready to use any means possible to
stop the government plan to relocate the city center.
"People are still at the municipal party office compound,"
he said late Tuesday. "I did not dare to go there, but
everyone is talking about this. There were hundreds of
petitioners there last night and this morning."
A Longnan city government statement said the protesters,
many of whom had come to petition government officials
over the loss of their homes and land, were "incited by a
few people with ulterior motives."