Thousands of residents of a town in southwest China took to the streets on Thursday, smashing police vehicles in the latest protest by citizens angered by the rough handling of local officials, according to news reports.
The protest in Qianxi County, Guizhou Province, was the latest of thousands of brief, local riots and demonstrations that happen in China every year, and like many recent outbreaks this one pitted residents against “urban administration” officials charged with enforcing law and order.
The “clash broke out between urban administration officials and the owner of an illegally parked vehicle, drawing in thousands of onlookers and sparking incidents of crowds smashing law enforcement vehicles and blocking roads,” the Web site of China National Radio reported yesterday.
Rioters turned over one urban administration vehicle and smashed five police vehicles, while others blocked the main streets around the riot with fork lifts and trucks, the report said.
“While dealing with the incident, some police were injured,” said the report, which added that by the early hours of yesterday, the crowds had largely scattered as police asserted control.
A riot in southern China in June was also triggered by rancor between residents and local law-and-order officials, and researchers say such explosive, but usually brief outbursts are a hallmark of the unrest testing the controls of the ruling Communist Party.
Radio Free Asia, a news service based in Washington, reported that the clash in Qianxi broke out after officials tried to confiscate an electric bicycle, injuring the female owner.
China saw almost 90,000 such “mass incidents” of riots, protests, mass petitions and other acts of unrest in 2009, according to a study published this year by two academics from Nankai University in north China. Some estimates go even higher.
That is an increase from 2007, when China had more than 80,000 mass incidents, up from more than 60,000 in 2006, according to an earlier report from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
Like many other recent protests and riots, news of this one spread on China’s Internet, especially on Sina’s popular Weibo microblogging site, Radio Free Asia reported.
However, Chinese authorities are wary of any discussion of such discontent spreading and by yesterday morning, searches on Weibo for Qianxi county and even Guizhou Province were largely blocked on Weibo, with a message saying the “relevant legal regulations” prevented showing the search results.
Users nonetheless posted comments and some drew sardonic parallels with the recent riots in London and other English cities.
“In fact, China has riots more serious than England’s every week,” one Weibo comment said.
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