2010 Ma'anshan riot
The 2010 Ma'anshan riot (马鞍山局长打人事件) or the June 11 incident (6.11 事件) occurred in Anhui Province, Ma'anshan, Huashan District in the People's Republic of China on June 11, 2010. It started out when a Communist Party of China official hit a boy with his car followed by a number of angry responses. The city then rioted over the official's action.
Incident
At 6:40 pm on June 11, Communist Party Ma'anshan tourism official Wang Quo-qing (汪国庆) was driving in a car with another female passenger down hubei east road (湖北东路) darunfa market (大润发卖场).[1] A young boy was hit lightly. Instead of apologizing, Wang got out of the car and attacked the boy. The female passenger also agreed and complimented the attack saying it was a "good hit". Wang was talking to the boy, "Do you know who I am? I am the government leader." This stirred anger amongst the crowd.[1][2] The woman in the passenger side followed by saying she knew where the boy attended school judging by the uniform and that she had the authority to "mess him up".[2]
Riot
Pedestrians started attacking them with bricks on the street. This quickly led to 3,000 to 4,000 people following in the riot. At around 11:30 pm the city's CPC secretary Zheng Wei-wen (郑为文) arrived on scene to handle the case and gave some visibility. He said if the case was not handled well, the citizens can find Zheng himself.[2]
About 10 minutes later the armed riot-police-unit arrived on the scene. The crowd started throwing all types of objects in complete chaos. The police responded by firing tear gas. Afterward there were some reports that questioned whether Wang Quo-qing was drunk at the time.[1]
Reporting
The riot was cited overseas as an example of protests against government corruption in China[3] that were not reported in local media.[4]
References
- Sina.com. "Sina.com." 安徽馬鞍山局長打人事件續:已被警方拘留. Retrieved on 2010-06-26.
- China.big5.huanbohainews.com. "Huanbohainews.com Archived 2011-07-07 at the Wayback Machine." 馬鞍山局長開車肇事當街打人 市委書記:就地免職 . Retrieved on 2010-06-26.
- "China: Thousands Protest after Chinese Official Slaps School Boy". Epoch Times. 15 June 2010. Retrieved 6 April 2018.
- "Nuove rivolte nella provincia dello Jiangsu". Laogai. 20 July 2010. Retrieved 6 April 2018.