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China Riots After Killing Of Fruit Vendor: Reports

China Riots Fruit Vendor

First Posted: 07/27/11 07:29 PM ET Updated: 09/26/11 06:12 AM ET

BEIJING - July 27 (Reuters) - Angry residents in a southern Chinese city went on the rampage after officials apparently beat to death a disabled fruit vendor, a state media said on Wednesday, in the latest incident of social unrest in the world's second-largest economy.

The China Daily said that thousands of people gathered on the streets of Anshun in Guizhou province on Tuesday afternoon, throwing stones at police and overturning a government vehicle.

The riot was sparked after urban management officers -- a quasi-police force that enforces laws against begging and other petty offences -- were suspected of beating the vendor to death, the newspaper said.

"The unidentified vendor died in front of the gate of a market ... which led to the gathering of the local people," it cited a government statement as saying.

"Before the incident occurred, urban management officers were working in the area," it added, saying the statement gave no other details.

The newspaper showed a picture of an urban management vehicle which had been overturned, along with smashed windows and doors that had been torn off.

Xinhua news agency said around 30 protesters and 10 police officers were injured in the unrest.

The elder brother of the dead man has "consented to (an)autopsy and asked police to seek justice", it added. "Police are questioning six city management staff members involved in the case."

Footage on China's popular Youku.com website, the country's answer to YouTube, showed a large crowed gathered in the street, and what seemed to be a body on the ground shaded by umbrellas.

An overturned vehicle could be seen in the distance, along with many police officers and a black armoured car used by China's riot police.

Reuters could not authenticate the footage, nor when it was taken. Calls to the Anshun government seeking comment went unanswered.

"It was a total mess," one onlooker surnamed Jiang told the China Daily. "The people threw stones at the police officers and my feet were hit by flying rocks."

Hong Kong's Ming Pao newspaper said that the police used water cannons to disperse the protesters, who finally left the scene late in the evening.

In 2008, crowds stormed police and government headquarters in another part of Guizhou after allegations spread that police had covered up the rape and murder of a local teenage girl, seeking to protect the son of a local official.

China's stability-obsessed rulers get nervous about any sort of protest or unrest.

Earlier this month, a court in the southern export hub of Guangdong province jailed 11 people for their roles in riots that hit a city there in June.

In 2007, China had more than 80,000 "mass incidents", up from more than 60,000 in 2006, according to the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. Many involved no more than dozens protesting against local officials over complaints about corruption, abuse of power, pollution or poor wages.

No authoritative estimates of the number of protests, riots and mass petitions since then have been released. (Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Alex Richardson)


Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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BEIJING - July 27 (Reuters) - Angry residents in a southern Chinese city went on the rampage after officials apparently beat to death a disabled fruit vendor, a state media said on Wednesday, in t...
BEIJING - July 27 (Reuters) - Angry residents in a southern Chinese city went on the rampage after officials apparently beat to death a disabled fruit vendor, a state media said on Wednesday, in t...
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12:47 AM on 07/30/2011
If you think this is bad you should watch the documentary on North Korea on netflix! It makes China look like Disney World!
05:43 PM on 07/29/2011
That's why I love these people in my country. They are waking day by day, not just standing there and watching anymore. One gets bullied, thousands stand out and fight back.
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Max Shaw
My micro-bio is no longer empty.
05:09 PM on 07/28/2011
Way to feel big fellas...beat a helpless disabled man to death.. What a great use of power.
Karma2U
Blessed are the Peacemakers
03:55 PM on 07/28/2011
China - the country that just this week chided the US for it's lack of democracy.
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cuoi
The obstacle is the path
07:04 PM on 07/28/2011
And they would be right. We're no more democratic than they are communist. Meaningless terms these days.
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debnaert
01:45 PM on 07/28/2011
What a terrible world we live in... only the strong survive in those countries.
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grammasher
01:57 PM on 07/28/2011
Same can be said here.
04:06 PM on 07/28/2011
While you may have never lived abroad, I'll kindly clue you in on something that is worth knowing. The news, wherever you go, is likely to lean in certain directions. While we may technically have more freedom of the press and a 'better life' in the US, you should know that our news is biased. Stories that show the Chinese in a good light don't really make news here. It's clear to see the bent on news by living abroad and taking in different stories from different countries. Even if you were to read 10 reports on the same news story, you're still only getting the point of view of the author. Plenty of Chinese and people around the world in countries which many Americans have naively looked down upon live quite a fruitful life.
01:06 PM on 07/28/2011
Why always the fruit vendors? That's an interesting connection...
Unlike the Middle East though, this will almost definitely remain an isolated incident. Localized riots & protests don't seem to travel far.

The standard response from many Chinese still seems to be "we don't care about politics - the economy is booming, so we're happy." But that mentality is only sustainable with continued economic growth, and I imagine it's not universal.

After 60yrs of "Communism," China is essentially right back where they started and only getting worse/more corrupt as those in power at all levels manage to enrich themselves. We think wealth disparity is bad in the U.S., but even our poorest citizens generally don't still live like it's the early 1900s.
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cuoi
The obstacle is the path
07:05 PM on 07/28/2011
Well, if they are going back to where they started, then millions may expect to survive, become drug addicted and work the streets...
08:24 AM on 07/29/2011
Maybe vendors are kind of vulnerable, I mean, their rights are more likely to be infringed under city laws. I see NYPD measures the distance between vendor carts and the curb every day, seizing every chance to fine them. Last year, each NYC street vendor was fined by average of $433, no matter licensed or not.
12:39 PM on 07/28/2011
It seems as if the average citizen every where, is really getting sick of their government officials.
In China I would imagine, it to be very difficult to have an up rising, the people would really need to stick together, to protect themselves. They could be locked away without recourse.
01:28 PM on 07/28/2011
Yes, it would take sheer guts or sheer crowd's anonymity. Finally the Chinese man awakes.
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DAE
05:11 PM on 08/08/2011
How ridiculous can you get. The Chinese awoke when they threw the foreigners out.
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cuoi
The obstacle is the path
07:07 PM on 07/28/2011
In Orlando FL, try feeding the poor except at designated areas at designated times and you go to jail. And that is not even a protest. A protest would bring out the APC's and elephant guns.
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ForVivi
Another button, another buttonhole.
01:00 AM on 07/29/2011
You can feed birds but not people...Sad!
12:38 PM on 07/28/2011
Death of disabled fruit??? HP, you really, really need to get some better educated proofreaders for your headlines, at least. And don't get me started on the fourth grade grammer found in some of your stories.
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stargazer13
To Love One Is To Love All
12:20 PM on 07/28/2011
china simmering
12:19 PM on 07/28/2011
And we are indebted to china..SCARY!
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DAE
05:12 PM on 08/08/2011
So what's your opinion of the riots in London?
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chaya
Another proud veteran
12:14 PM on 07/28/2011
In another article on HuffPo, Chinese officials complain that American democracy is too unstable. Stability is key! It must be striven for!

All those tens of thousands of demonstrating and rioting Chinese must make them crazy, huh?
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sammyscout
Speak truth to [GOP] Ignorance
06:00 AM on 07/29/2011
apples and oranges!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frank day
Republican = FAIL
11:57 AM on 07/28/2011
China is a mess.
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sammyscout
Speak truth to [GOP] Ignorance
06:01 AM on 07/29/2011
China is anything but a mess. Try again!
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DAE
05:13 PM on 08/08/2011
And England, and Spain, and Greece?
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KMBerger
"Cui adhaereo, prae est,"
11:39 AM on 07/28/2011
A the peaceful one-party totalitarian dictatorship. Such a great place to live and work. Stability at all costs, no protests against corruption, no protests about massive water, air pollution and food contamination, substandard construction on train projects, do I have to go on listing these concerns in the perfect state of the PRC????
11:51 AM on 07/28/2011
Sounds like the GOP/Tea-Baggers view of an ideal US.
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chaya
Another proud veteran
12:16 PM on 07/28/2011
That's a good point. The construction of our transportation infrastructure is good enough--it's the maintenance of it that the baggers don't want.
12:19 PM on 07/28/2011
rather Obama the nanny state
07:06 PM on 07/28/2011
Actually, there is a lot of protest about these things, all the time in fact. But it is against the law to organize an opposition party, and dissidents and even investigative journalists are routinely arrested to dissuade them from complaining too loud or digging too deeply.

I have been to China 9 times and speak fluent Mandarin, and studied the country seriously in grad school and have kept up on it. One thing Americans should realize is that the Orwellian image of the brainwashing totalitarian state is not very accurate when it comes to China. As Joseph Fewsmith notes in his "China Since Tian'anmen", the Chinese government has become very good at "framing" issues for public consumption, whether one is talking about Tibet or infrastructure development or whatever. And I have watched CCTV's economic coverage extensively in the last 4 years (I have spent about 5 months in China during that time), and the way the issue of US economic malfeasance is being portrayed is quite plausible and widely accepted as reasonable by educated Chinese. This is not good for the US. There is a lot of justified (I think) resentment in China about US overconsumption and bad economic behavior that is hurting China's own interests. This cannot end well for us if China is our banker, and IT IS.
celticfireusa
I Am A Limousine Liberal
11:31 AM on 07/28/2011
Well it comming a new Mao Tse Tung and a revolution with it...
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NMLurker
Mitt Swiss Cayman Romney RELEASE 08 09 TAX RETURNS
11:18 AM on 07/28/2011
"China's stability-obsessed rulers get nervous about any sort of protest or unrest."

Maybe they should do what America did to oppress their loud people, start a failed war on drugs.