Migrant workers rioted for three days in a town in eastern China in a fresh sign of rumbling social unrest running up to the Beijing Olympics.
The protests began on 10 July in Kanmen in the coastal province of Zhejiang. Workers - reportedly angered by a beating meted out to a colleague - attacked a police station for three successive nights.
The incident comes just weeks after a 30,000-strong crowd torched dozens of official buildings in Guizhou province. They were protesting about an alleged cover-up over the death of a teenage girl. Police said the girl committed suicide but her family said she was murdered by the son of a local official.
One hundred people have been detained over the Guizhou riots, Chinese state media reported on Monday, including "39 members of local gangs".
The incident in Kanmen erupted after a migrant worker was viciously beaten by a security guard, a Hong Kong-based human rights group said. A crowd surrounded the police station after officers detained the worker, who had gone to file a complaint, the Information Centre for Human Rights and Democracy said, after which three nights of protests and rioting followed.
Three hundred military police arrived in the town on Sunday, another local official told the Associated Press news agency.
In recent years, more and more reports of local protests have emerged from China. Corruption, land seizures, abuse of power by local officials and the widening gap between rich and poor are the common causes.
Comments
Glad you're posting this
Glad you're posting this here. I wrote some comments on this & other recent incidents here. Has anyone seen any more details or updates about this?
Hi husunzi, thaks for the
Hi husunzi, thaks for the link to that post - it seems like you're better informed than we are though. Are you connected with the China Study Group then? That's the first time I've seen that site.
Yup. The old CSG website
Yup. The old CSG website (.org instead of the present .net - don't go there, some asshole's using our old material to make money now) started showing some vitality around 2004-2006, but then we lost control over the domain name, & now a lot people think CSG just died. The new website isn't as active, but that's partly because some people have been working behind the scenes on CSG's new journal, China Left Review. The group's pretty diverse politically, so it's not clear at this point where things will go. Anyway, hope you find it useful. At least the CSG newsfeed is usually updated several times a week.
Thanks for all your work on libcom by the way - its value is beyond measure ;-)