BBC News Asia-Pacific

4 March 2011 Last updated at 11:51 GMT


China's fear of Middle East-style unrest
Damian Grammaticas By Damian Grammaticas BBC News, Beijing

The BBC team faced violence from Chinese state security officers while filming 
last weekend

China's government has, in recent days, responded to calls on the internet for 
Middle East-style popular protests in Chinese cities by rounding up dozens of 
human rights defenders, lawyers and others.

Human rights groups say a broad crackdown is under way and at least 100 people 
have been picked up or warned by the authorities. Some of those taken by the 
security services have vanished without a trace. Human rights organisations say 
such detentions are illegal under Chinese law.

The authorities have also moved to limit the relatively free reporting they 
have allowed in China since the 2008 Olympics. They have banned foreign 
journalists from filming in several public places in the capital, Beijing, 
including the city's most famous shopping street, Wangfujing.

Several reporters, including our BBC team, faced violence from Chinese state 
security officers when we tried to film on the street last weekend.

A reporter from Bloomberg News was attacked, dragged into a building, punched 
and kicked in an assault that lasted over 10 minutes. Other reporters have been 
warned that if they try to film this weekend they may be expelled from the 
country.

With the country's annual People's Congress to begin on Saturday, China's 
Communist Party rulers appear to be seriously concerned about he possibility of 
popular pro-democracy protests.

So right across China the police are on edge. Last Sunday hundreds of uniformed 
officers flooded the shopping streets and squares in Shanghai, Beijing and 
other cities where the internet messages had called on people to gather.

There were thousands more plainclothes officers on duty, often poorly disguised 
as street cleaners, or ordinary shoppers.

In Shanghai police dragged several people away, and in Beijing we were stopped 
as we tried to see if anyone would heed the call to protest.

As we showed our documents to uniformed police and waited for their clearance 
to move on we were set upon by plainclothes thugs.

The police officers even helped them as I was dragged by the hair, shoved 
against the side of a police van, then slammed to the floor. Deliberately they 
crushed my leg in the vehicle's door.
Tensions and conflicts

So why you have to ask is China lashing out? What are its authoritarian leaders 
so worried about?

The Communist Party-led government faces small protests around the country 
every week. What happened late last year, in the village of Baihutou in the 
south of China is a typical case.

A group of villagers had been resisting what they said was a land grab by the 
local authorities who were trying to force them out of their homes to develop 
the area.

Local governments rely on the profits from development for income. And it is 
often claimed such projects are easy sources of corruption too.
Feng Guang Mei Feng Guang Mei says the charges against her husband Xu Kun are 
unjust

In October 2010, the authorities sent a huge squad of armed riot police into 
Baihutou village.

Wrecking crews with mechanical diggers destroyed five houses belonging to 
people who were refusing to move out. Still pictures seen by the BBC show riot 
officers beating people with batons.

This week three of the villagers who had tried to stop the demolitions were put 
on trial, some charged with obstructing official business.

Feng Guang Mei's husband, Xu Kun, the democratically elected village chief who 
led the campaign against the appropriation of their land, was one of those in 
court.

Outside the courthouse, his wife, in tears, told me: "What's happened to my 
husband is really unjust. This kind of act by the government makes it 
impossible for common people like us to live a good life.

"Right now I really feel it is very difficult to be a good person."

The authorities claim Xu Kun was profiting illegally by collecting fees from a 
car park. But the land with the car park had been assigned to the village by 
the authorities specifically so people could earn an income from it.

The family's legal advisor Liu Wei says the government is prosecuting Xu Kun 
out of nothing more than malice.

"First, regarding the claim the car park was run as a business, Xu Kun did not 
offend any part of our criminal law. Anyone who knows the law can tell you that 
easily," she said.

"From the time he was arrested to today the government's treatment of him has 
been inhuman. It all shows that this is simply an act of revenge against Xu Kun 
by the government."
Civil rights

There are tensions and conflicts like this every day all over China. Despite 
the booming economic growth there are millions who feel shut out, angry at 
official corruption, at inequalities that are rising, at land grabs. That's why 
the government is so concerned about the possibilities for unrest.

Feng Hai Bo's mother was also on trial. He took us to see where his family home 
used to be. Now it is just a pile of rubble, bulldozed to the ground even 
before the family could get their possessions out.
Archive image In October 2010, the authorities sent a huge squad of armed riot 
police into Baihutou village

"They simply surrounded our house, and pushed it over," Feng Hai Bo tells me. 
"My father and I tried to stop them, but we couldn't, they had too many armed 
police. They dragged us out and demolished it."

China's rulers worry these small disputes could snowball into something bigger. 
They are particularly worried about the way the internet or images in the media 
can stir up public opinion.

Feng Hai Bo certainly feels unjustly treated.

"The biggest problem is that our civil rights are not respected. I feel that 
the way the government treats ordinary people is really unjust. Even our 
personal freedoms aren't protected."

Just five minutes walk from Feng Hai Bo's demolished home you find an amazing 
site, a beautiful white sand beach. There are people playing on jet skis, girls 
jumping in the surf having their pictures taken. The contrast with the 
demolished village nearby couldn't be greater.

Those on the beach are China's newly wealthy middle classes, decked out in 
sunglasses and sunhats, strolling on the sand, enjoying a holiday.

You can see why the land next to the beach is suddenly so valuable, and also 
why tensions in China are growing over the rising inequalities here.

It's why the government is so worried about the social instability that could 
result.

At the court house the trial of Xu Kun and the others lasted one day. A member 
of their legal team said he was prevented from even submitting evidence for the 
defence.

The verdict will come in a few weeks. Outside a small group of villagers 
shouted support for the prisoners as they were driven away in police vans. Then 
the villagers headed off.

There is discontent in China, but no sign broader Middle-East style protests 
will happen here.

The ruling Communist Party has as firm a grip on power as ever. But with so 
many small disputes around the country, it seems profoundly worried by the call 
for popular demonstrations.




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