Authorities in southern China have detained the chief of a village that was once hailed as a model for grassroots democracy, accusing him of accepting bribes, while deploying hundreds of riot police to stave off potential trouble.
The coastal fishing village of Wukan in southern Guangdong Province was the scene of a massive uprising in 2011, when people barricaded the area from security forces for several months to demand justice against corruption and land grabs.
The defiant civil movement drew international media attention and eventually persuaded provincial Chinese Communist Party leaders to sack the former village chief and allow elections, which a group of protest leaders won by a landslide.
However, an open letter posted late on Friday by the Lufeng City Government said that Wukan’s directly elected and popular village chief, Lin Zuluan (林祖巒), had been arrested for abusing his position to take bribes. There were no other details.
A villager who declined to be identified said that outraged villagers tried to surround the local police station in protest, but hundreds of riot police and other security personnel swarmed into the village and several arrests were made.
“Everyone is very angry, but we cannot do much right now, there are police everywhere. It is very tense,” the villager said.
The Lufeng City Government — which has jurisdiction over Wukan — warned villagers in a public notice against taking any retaliatory action, adding that authorities “would absolutely not use a soft hand” to deal with potential unrest.
Pictures posted by villagers showed battalions of police with shields and helmets blocking roads in the village.
Days earlier, Lin wrote an open letter pledging to launch a fresh mass protest to demand justice for illegal land sales and unauthorized construction on village land — issues that have festered since 2011.
“They are all liars who say one thing and do another. They are incompetent to be officials and should be kicked off,” read a public notice in Wukan that was posted online, calling for action against the land grabs. “We cannot trust them anymore. We shall solve the problems ourselves.”
Several prominent villagers have also been taken into police custody, according to village sources.
Many of the village’s democratically elected governing committee from 2012 has now been forced from office, with some of the corrupt old guard reinstated to their former positions.
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