Fujian City Warned Over Unrest
HONG KONG-Authorities in the southeastern Chinese city of Fuzhou have warned local
officials to take measures to prevent "mass incidents" over a land dispute, as
the global economic crisis sparks government fears of growing social unrest, Radio Free
Asia (RFA) reports.
In a document issued by the Chinese Communist Party propaganda department of Fuzhou city
and obtained by RFA's Mandarin service, the government warned officials in Fuqing
city, lower down the chain of command, to beware of fallout.
"We recommend that the relevant departments take this very seriously and take
immediate steps to ensure that no mass incidents take place," the document, titled
"Special Report on Web Opinion" and signed by the "Web news management
division," said.
Dated Jan. 21 and seen Thursday, the communiqué was sparked by a Jan. 20 report on a
dispute between villagers around Haikou township, near Fuqing, and local officials, over
compensation for farmland lost to development.
The communiqué said China's state security police were unable to block online access
to the report, carried on RFA's Web site, "for technical reasons."
"As the hostile Web site server is located overseas, we cannot deal with it
technically, but our state security department can block this kind of Web site so that
netizens in China cannot access the Web site under normal circumstances," the
document said.
"We have already informed the Propaganda Department of Fuqing City of this
matter," it added.
China, which already sees thousands of "mass incidents" a week, is bracing for
further social unrest as the global economic crisis begins to bite and waves of laid-off
migrant workers head home from China's once-booming coastal cities.
The head of China's judiciary has called on courts to maintain social stability amid
the global economic slowdown, saying the number of labor disputes had jumped by 94 percent
in the first 10 months of 2008, compared with the same period a year earlier.
The "Regulation on Petitions" issued recently by China's State Council
states that petitioners may voice their grievances to higher-level government offices.
Many petitioners have spent years pursuing complaints against local officials over
disputes including the loss of homes and farmland, unpaid wages and pensions, or alleged
mistreatment by the authorities.
Farmers in Fuqing said in January that they have been petitioning for several years over
farmland acquired for development as far back as 1995 for industrial development.
A local villager surnamed Chen said the dispute over compensation for their farmland
remained unresolved.
"They don't care about this," he said Thursday. "Communist Party
officials have no sense of shame."
Rural activist Zhang Jianping said state-run Chinese media would avoid reporting such
disputes in Haikou township.
"We want the authorities to be very clear that the channels that enable our voices to
be heard should not be labeled as hostile media," he said.
He commented on the propaganda communiqué: "Now you see the state security police
have become the accomplices of those who bully the farmers."
Haikou township Party secretary Zhuang Weishun said RFA's report would have little
effect on the situation.
"Nothing has changed," he said.
"The central government has sent different investigative teams and they did not find
any problems. It is just a number of diehard petitioners making wrongful
accusations."
Original reporting in Mandarin by Ding Xiao. Translated by Jia Yuan. Mandarin service
director: Jennifer Chou. Edited by Sarah Jackson-Han.
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