2008 Weng'an riot

The 2008 Weng'an riot was a riot on June 28, 2008 involving tens of thousands of residents in Weng'an County, Qiannan Buyei and Miao Autonomous Prefecture, in the Guizhou province of Southwest China. Rioters smashed government buildings and torched several police cars to protest against an alleged police cover-up of a girl's death.

Incident

Alleged rape and murder

A 16-year-old local girl by the name of Li Shufen (李树芬, born in July 1991[1]) was found dead in a river. She had been earlier spotted with two younger men who allegedly had familial ties with the local public security bureau.[2] Li Shufen's family and friends have said that she was raped and murdered by the son of a prominent Weng'an official and another youth and that her corpse was then thrown into the river.[3][4]

The subsequent media release denied the claims, and states the two young men and one young woman involved are of local farmers' families.[5]

Defending the coffin

The parents were guarding the girl's coffin day and night in fear the local police might attempt to tamper with the evidence. "We won't accept an evil deal," say parents. The parents reported there have already been two attempts to steal the dead body. An additional 100 local residents have helped them guard the coffin.

Claims

Police

The girl's dead body was pulled from the river on June 22, 2008. Initial police report said that the girl was drowned or jumped into the river and committed suicide.[6] A document submitted by the local government stated the girl was unhappy with life because her parents favored her elder brother.[7]

Girl's family and relatives

Relatives of the girl blamed the local police for shoddy investigation and possible corruption.[2] One of the parents said a police officer threatened them, telling them: "Don't even try to file a lawsuit; there [is] no justice in this world."[6]

Three murder suspects

Guizhou's official media published the first interview with three of the girl's friends (the murder suspects) on July 4, 2008. They were the last people to see the girl alive.[8][9]

  • Chen Guangquan (陈光权), 21 years old, was the victim's boyfriend. He denied any raping.[10]
  • Liu Yanchao (刘言超), 18 years old, said he did pushups on the bridge, then struggled after trying to save the girl.
  • Wang Jiao (王娇), 16 years old, she was also at the scene.

Protests


About 500 middle school students had gone to protest at the public security bureau, but they were turned away and beaten.[2] Rumors have been circulating that the girl's uncle, a local teacher, was beaten when he questioned the police and the uncle died from his injuries at the local hospital but this was not confirmed. This roused an angry mob of thousands of people, who began overturning cars and setting fire to government buildings, including the local Communist party headquarters.[6] The Associated Press reported "30,000 angry citizens swarmed the streets". The riot lasted 7 hours with 150 people injured. About 160 office buildings and 40 cars were torched.[11]

Role of Chinese bloggers

  • Zhou Shuguang, a self-claimed citizen journalist also known as "Zola" in the Chinese blogosphere, went to Weng'an to conduct a personal interview with Li Shufen's family, using all the Internet communication tools like MSN, QQ, and Twitter, plus his own cell phone, posting to his personal web page unofficial reports along with photos and pleas from the family of the Li Shufen. It was believed that this was the first time Twitter had ever been used to report a mass Chinese protest.

Zhou, as well as many other like-minded Chinese netizens, provide on-the-scene information on events like this, as a means to give voice to ordinary Chinese whose stories get overlooked or censored in a country where all the media is under the control of China's Publicity Department of the Communist Party of China Central Committee.[12]

  • Tianya.cn, a social networking website (owned by Hainan Tianya Online Networking Technology Co.) that offers various chat rooms for bloggers to discuss social issues, played an indispensable role in the supporting of the students' actions during the riot. As reported by Jonathan Ansfield on blog.newsweek.com/July 2, 2008:

All night and morning, I was clicking on posts about it. First it was there. Then it was gone. Then it was there again. Then gone. Every few minutes it was being deleted, sometimes every few seconds. The site had orders to block it. That was obvious. But they couldn't keep up. Every time they did, we Netizens got angrier and angrier.

Roland Soong of East South West North, a well known website that does Chinese-to-English translations, wrote:

For example, the first item says that oveseas media are paying a great deal of attention to the lives of people living in the plateau of the Yunnan-Guizhou area. The second item says that the people of X'an (Guizhou) are lighting an extra large sacred flame to celebrate the Beijing Olympics. The third item just says, "Delete this!! Your mother's c*nt!" The fourth item says that "when the army arrives in southwestern China, I think something big will happen! I believe that our troops(人民子弟兵) have conscience." The fifth item says that the anti-American(反美) posts from the anti-American warriors(反美鬥士) have all met death -- the revolution has not yet succeeded and our comrades need to keep working(革命尚未成功,同志尚須努力, a famous quotation from Sun Yat-sen). What was that last one? The term "American" is being used for "Chinese government"!

  • Xinhua, the official central government news agency, played an unusual role in this incident, simply by keeping open a chat room for bloggers to voice their anger towards the local bunkering and incompetent officials. By June 29, there had been more than 200,000 hits on the 2,000 remarks left in the chatroom of the only uncensored official Xinhua website, mostly in strong condemnation of the way that the corrupt police mishandled the girl's death and used excessive force against protestors.[13]
  • At several other popular forums or chat sites, including Kdnet (猫眼看人), Maopu (猫撲), Strong Nation (强國), Sina.com, Netese (网易), and QQ, most of the users voiced their support for the Weng'an rioters, and they all supply their own versions of information (including text, photos, and sometimes video files), different, or sometimes opposite to the versions supplied by the Guizhou police.[14][15]

Arrests

Authorities have rounded up 300 people accused of taking part in the riot. Other sources have said 200 rioters were arrested. Over 1,500 paramilitary and riot police were dispatched to the county. Police detained 59 people for their alleged roles.

Government response

Photographs as well as comments on the Guizhou protest in chatrooms and forums were quickly deleted by the mainland Internet censors. The government launched a campaign to defuse protest ahead of the Beijing Olympics to continue carrying out social harmony and stability. An "Olympics Stability Drive" was announced after the incident. Public security officials in Guizhou offered a total of 9,000 yuan (about $1,300 or £700 or 800) to the parents of the teenage girl, with 3,000 paid by each suspect. The father said "We will never accept an evil deal like this, we need to seek justice for our daughter."[6]

Guizhou's Communist Party chief, Shi Zongyuan (石宗源), estimated that prior use of force by local officials have contributed to the widespread discontentment.[16] He further said the deep rooted reasons behind the protest were "rude and roughhand solutions" by local authorities to solve disputes over mines, demolition of homes for public projects, relocation of residents for reservoir construction, and many other issues.[17] Several local officials, including Weng'an's Party chief, have been dismissed for breach of duty on July 3 and 4, 2008.[16]

Investigation

The government Guizhou Daily newspaper claimed the family was too emotionally unstable to accept the findings. The Information Centre for Human Rights and Democracy said three men were questioned, but were let go. Xinhua News Agency reported on July 1, 2008 that the investigation would be reopened. The provincial government sent 10 criminal investigators and forensic experts to re-investigate the death.[6] The autopsy was carried out by five experts from the Guizhou public security department and the Higher People's Court. After three autopsies, there were no signs of any sexual attack according to state officials.[7] The girl's father, Li Xiuzhong, did not accept the autopsy findings. He said "There is nothing I can do, they have sent 10 officials to my home, watching me day and night. They told me what to say when the reporters interviewed me. They threatened me that [if I said anything wrong], then another riot can happen and I must bear in mind that national security is at stake." Li Shufen was buried in her hometown about 20 km from Weng'an.[7] Provincial authority said that every year, about 600 to 800 criminal cases take place in the county, but half of them are not solved.[10]

See also

References

  1. "Guizhou Provincial Government's Information Office held press conference on Weng'an June 28 Event" (in Chinese). Xinhua. 2008-07-02. Retrieved 2008-07-04.
  2. Iht. "International Herald Tribute." Chinese riot over handling of girl's killing. Retrieved on 2008-07-01.
  3. "Ritos over teenager's rape and murder by officials". Youtube. 30 June 2008. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
  4. Li Datong (2008-07-30). "The Weng'an model: China's fix-it governance". Opendemocracy.net. Archived from the original on 2009-05-30. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
  5. (in Chinese) 瓮安6.28:官员回应元凶是当地干部亲属之 Archived 2008-07-05 at the Wayback Machine
  6. Asianews.it. "Asianews.it." Unrest in Guizhou as public security tries to buy the silence of the victim's parents. Retrieved on 2008-07-01.
  7. Sina.com. "Sina.com." Guizhou official: Third finding on rape claim to be made known. Retrieved on 2008-07-04.
  8. "Girl's Death Sparks Rioting In China". China Digital Times. May 5, 2009. Retrieved 2009-06-19.
  9. "Hundreds arrested in China for rioting over death of student". WELT online. 30 June 2008. Retrieved 2009-06-19.
  10. Sina. "Sina." We didn't do it, male friends of dead girl say. Retrieved on 2008-07-04.
  11. Sina. "Sina." Officials admit existence of grievances before violent protest in SW China. Retrieved on 2008-07-04.
  12. GEOFFREY A. FOWLER and JULIET Y.E. (5 July 2008). "Chinese Bloggers Score a Victory Against the Government Firings Indicate Growing Power; Exploits of 'Zola'". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
  13. Wang Tai Peng (4 September 2008). "Lessons from the Weng'an riots - Fanning the flame online". Asia Inc. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
  14. Jonathan Ansfield (2 July 2008). "Guizhou Riots: How much steam can the machine filter?". Newsweek, Countdown to Beijing by Melinda Liu. Archived from the original on March 30, 2009. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
  15. Wang Tai Peng (4 September 2008). "Lessons from the Weng'an riots". Asia Inc. Archived from the original on June 1, 2009. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
  16. "Weng'an's secretary and administrator dismissed". Xinhua. 2008-07-04. Retrieved 2008-07-05.
  17. Xinhuanet. "Xinhuanet." Two more officials sacked after violent protest over teens' death. Retrieved on 2008-07-04.
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