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China Major Protest Demands Halt To Planned Coal-Fired Power Plant

China Massive Protest

By GILLIAN WONG   12/20/11 07:50 AM ET   AP

BEIJING -- Thousands of people besieged a government office in a southern Chinese town Tuesday and blocked a highway to demand a halt to a planned coal-fired power plant because of concerns about pollution, protesters said.

Riot police used tear gas in an attempt to disperse the protesters at the highway in the town of Haimen in Guangdong province, and the demonstrators hurled rocks, water bottles and bricks in return, said one of the protesters, a 27-year-old man surnamed Chen.

It is the second major protest in two weeks in a corner of coastal southern China that has been seeing periodic unrest over the last few years, primarily over land disputes. In much of Guangdong province, conflicts have been intense because the area is among China's most economically developed, pushing up land prices.

In Wukan, a village to the southwest of Haimen, protesters drove local authorities from the area nearly two weeks ago over a land dispute. Wukan protesters reached by phone Tuesday said plans for a large march on a nearby government office on Wednesday would go ahead.

In Haimen, some protesters clashed with police, leaving dozens hurt including women and police. Some in the crowd speculated that one man who was lying on the ground bleeding from his head had died, but that could not be confirmed, Chen said.

"We don't have any weapons, only mineral water bottles and we threw them at the police but the police were using batons to beat people up," Chen said in a phone interview. He estimated that around 20,000 people participated in the demonstration.

The protesters had first gathered in the morning at the office of the Haimen government and demanded a meeting with the township party secretary, Chen said.

A woman who answered the phone at the Haimen government office said the protesters had left and then hung up.

The protesters think that an existing coal-fired power plant has contributed to what they say is a spike in cancer cases and heavy pollution in the seas, a serious problem for a town where fishing is a source of livelihood.

"People are worried about the pollution that will be released by the (new) power plant," said Wang Xiebo, a fisherman reached by phone.

Another protester, a man surnamed Yang, provided a similar account of the protest and subsequent clash.

"Two or three of us fainted on the ground when they fired tear gas at us," Yang said. "The government offended us again and again by trying to build a power plant. This is going to affect our future generations. They still need to live," Yang said.

Photos circulating on China's popular Twitter-like microblog Weibo showed a crowd of protesters amassed at a large government building and then at a highway, as well as riot police with plastic shields and helmets lined up in tight rows. Some photos showed protesters and police injured and bleeding.

After three decades of laxly regulated industrialization, China is seeing a surge in protests over such environmental worries.

In September, hundreds of villagers in an eastern Chinese city near Shanghai demonstrated against pollution they blamed on a solar panel factory. In August, 12,000 residents in the northeastern port city of Dalian protested against a chemical plant after waves from a tropical storm broke a dike guarding the plant and raised fears that flood waters could release toxic chemicals.

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A young girl with protest signs during a protest rally by residents of Wukan, a fishing village in the southern province of Guangdong, as they demand the government take action over illegal land grabs and the death in custody of a local leader on December 19, 2011. The village of around 13,000 inhabitants accuse local officials of stealing communal land without compensating them with anger boiling over with the death in police custody of a village leader tasked with negotiating with authorities over the row. (Getty)
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BEIJING -- Thousands of people besieged a government office in a southern Chinese town Tuesday and blocked a highway to demand a halt to a planned coal-fired power plant because of concerns about poll...
BEIJING -- Thousands of people besieged a government office in a southern Chinese town Tuesday and blocked a highway to demand a halt to a planned coal-fired power plant because of concerns about poll...
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02:32 AM on 02/10/2012
这个鸡巴什么报还怪唷,老子认都不认求不到,图片上的是些啥子,有兄弟伙来说说没得?
07:36 PM on 12/26/2011
我只是来参观一下,顺便说下,图片怎么可以乱用?误伤友军了
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
iLoveOldNY
What Would George Carlin do?
01:11 AM on 12/21/2011
Coal fired power plants are sooo 80's.
11:35 PM on 12/20/2011
Coal-fired power plant, a typical not-in-my-backyard.
06:49 PM on 12/28/2011
Not really, it's more of a "we should have a say" issue. Coal power plants, especially if they don't have good scrubbers, are notoriously nasty things to be near.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RyanCSmith
Locke for people, Hobbes for corporations
09:38 PM on 12/20/2011
This article shows three VERY good things happening in China for their movement's sake:

1.) The protesters are not getting shot with live ammunition. Usual policy in China is to round up and shoot dissidents then imprison everyone else. No use of lethal force by government agencies is definitely a good thing considering how Tienanmen Square ended.

2.) This is hitting the Western media at all. My bet is this is only the tip of the iceberg of what's going on in China.

3.) The pictures of the demonstration moving around the Chinese internet. The Great Firewall and all the censoring stuff the PRC uses to control the flow of information is pretty tight, for this to be moving around is pretty big.

Good luck out there China, you're going to need it!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Heather Ferreira
07:43 PM on 12/25/2011
Fanned and faved
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progressivestance84
The Right is Wrong.
09:05 PM on 12/20/2011
If this happened in America the righties would be on the side of the police state. I wonder if mass protests will ever happen here?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Marco Lanz
11:13 PM on 12/20/2011
First part of your statement is conjecture. From the Tea Party marches, to the pro union rallies in Wisconsin & Ohio, and the OWS there has been protest and dissent throughout the US for much of 2011.
05:10 PM on 12/20/2011
We should all express our support for them, so more stuff liek this happen. I would like to see China become a properly functioning democracy with power to the people.
08:18 AM on 12/21/2011
I would like to see America become a properly functioning democracy with the power returned to the people.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
R2D2-51
Flower Power Forever
03:49 PM on 12/20/2011
Outstanding!!

This is a good sign, when you consider how hard it is to have hope, ever since Western Civilization continued its strategy for wanting to turn up the heat on the cling cling of the cash machine with the exploitation of the largest growing population groups on the planet forging the largest opportunity for wealth accumulation ever seen in human history.

Especially when you know that globalized material consumerism of which fossil fuels is the underlying beast which feeds it all as the primary conduit for wealth accumulation which powers it, is unfortunately set on default with no one having the power or desire to throttle it down except those who have the most to lose during the interim when it will inevitably crash and burn anyway.

Instead of using the trillions of dollars circulating around the world as investments that fuel the planets destruction, we need a massive outpouring of global dissent instead use this money to invest in technologies that provide for clean sustainable energy programs and all the products in the future that emanate from same can start here as the Number1 priority for humanity itself.

That said, what better place to fire up the required mass global movement of dissent which can shut it down to put an end to the madness.
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Karma2U
Blessed are the Peacemakers
03:21 PM on 12/20/2011
Power to the People!
03:21 PM on 12/20/2011
China will fall. I have so many students from mainland China at my tiny college, and they all dread going back , and are starting to get in a fighting mood....
05:14 PM on 12/20/2011
The current government will hopefully crumble with a new democratic government in its place with power to the people, freedom of religion, human rights, I would love to see that happen. Perhaps the events in the Middle East and the Occupy movements are inspiring people to rebel against injustices. Pehrpas soon such rebellions and protests will sweep the world.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
danusgram
aww the flowers of spring are the best
03:15 PM on 12/20/2011
oh, oh....guess all the money they are making is now showing itself in protest to their government.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
03:14 PM on 12/20/2011
Glad to see the Chinese caring so much about the environment. Stop building new nukes and coal plants. plow all those trillions they would cost, into rooftop solar, offshore wind, efficiency and waste bio char bio fuels.
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04:50 PM on 12/20/2011
Solar and whirligigs aren't efficient
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
06:34 PM on 12/20/2011
yes they are. Solar is nearly 10 times as efficiency as plants at converting light to energy. Since the energy is free, it's the cost that matters, not the efficiency. The best solar is over 60%, the best PV is over 40%, but even the average 10-20% panels are good enough that rooftops, parking lots and roadsides can provide more than the peak electrical needs of the world. wind in on the order of 60% efficient and the wind is free.

Why did you think you had a point?
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MacTheCat
Those Clouds You See Aren't really clouds at all
03:03 PM on 12/20/2011
Occupy Beijing!
03:01 PM on 12/20/2011
Don't forget what happened at tiananmen square. Watch yourself.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
R2D2-51
Flower Power Forever
03:49 PM on 12/20/2011
Ever since workers at the Honda plant and the Dell circuit board facility in Szechuan it became clear the average worker on the street is very much cognizant of how Neoliberal economic policy will, if allowed to continue unabated, be responsible for the suffering & degradation of the quality of life for every living organism on the planet and it's ultimate decline as a viable member of this planet's living family.
06:02 AM on 12/21/2011
I think you made a point but I'm not sure what.
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Robert A Alba
02:53 PM on 12/20/2011
Dear China....welcome to the 21st century Keep up the good work and fairly soon you'll turn your peasant population into your own version of the American Homeless Dream.
09:14 PM on 12/20/2011
I guess that makes you a sheep for living here....while reaping the benefits, you hypocritcal fool!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robert A Alba
02:19 AM on 12/21/2011
Moron!