This story is a couple weeks old. In a few hours I will seek an update. Has you can guess, I'm hoping the villagers got to open the books and perform an audit but the odds of that are low.TAISHI, China - A telltale scent of insurrection wafts across parts of rural China, and it's filling the air of this industrialized Pearl River Delta village.
Angry residents have made the village hall a squatters' camp. They've evicted the mayor, who's also the local Communist Party chief, and seized village budget records, suspecting malfeasance. They've set up sentinels in case police riot squads come to evict them.
A red banner suspended over the hall's entry gate declares, "Remove the village officials. Give our rights back."
What's happening in Taishi, population 2,000, might seem like garden-variety social strife. But in China, such local revolts are a bellwether of broader unrest. The fault lines are many, including land disputes, a widening wealth gap, social injustices and rising health-care costs. Emboldened villagers are complaining, occasionally erupting in rampages. While top leaders of China's one-party state offer some sympathy, they've also tightened news censorship and prepared muscular methods to quell revolts.
In Taishi's case, the unrest has some unusual variants. Villagers are seeking the legal removal of the elected mayor, a new election and an audit of village finances. They say their efforts are lawful and nonviolent.
Even so, tension fills the air. Several organizers of the rebellion say police are looking for them, forcing them underground and on the run. Chinese authorities often have dealt harshly with protest leaders, fearing unrest could spread.
"I hid in the fields for seven hours in the rain while the police were looking for me," said Feng Qiusheng, a 26-year-old accountant, meeting with a reporter at a restaurant in Guangzhou, a flourishing city on the Pearl River an hour's drive north.
Chinese government officials acknowledge that demonstrations and disturbances are increasing. Zhou Yongkang, the minister in charge of the public security bureau, noted recently that the number of "mass incidents" rose from 58,000 in 2003 to 74,000 last year, involving 3.6 million people.
When China introduced direct grassroots elections in 1988, it appeared to be a major stride toward democratic reform. A decade later, the Communist Party adopted election standards, such as secret balloting and recall procedures, theoretically giving villagers a say in picking leaders and determining such matters as village finances, public works and economic activity.
In many areas, the elections have been a success. In others, villagers complain of improper procedures, meddling by party leaders and even outright rigging.
"In reality, village officials can prevent people they don't like from running for office," said Lu Banglie, a grassroots elections expert from Hubei province who came to Taishi to help in the recall campaign.
Problems didn't seem apparent immediately with Taishi's elections in early April. The local party chief, Chen Jinsheng, ran for mayor and won.
"He's very rich. He's charismatic," said Feng Yueping, a 19-year-old villager who said she voted for him.
But others began to talk about financial irregularities in the village, which is prosperous by Chinese standards. It has jewelry, clothing and footwear factories, as well as manufacturing plants for electronic components and motorcycles. Taishi profited from selling land to the factories, and it collects annual fees.
Like many villages in China, Taishi is set up under a collective system in which village income is distributed to adult residents each year as dividends. Last year, the average adult in Taishi received 1,000 yuan, or about $123.45, a sizable sum for most residents, but less than in other nearby communities.
"There are many villages in China that have this kind of problem with village finances. Villagers are often suspicious of their leaders on money issues," said Guo Feixiong, a lawyer from Beijing who's coordinating the election-recall effort in Taishi.
Few villages, however, are in the habit of opening the books for local scrutiny.
Reports of irregularities in Taishi grew to a fever pitch last month, and at a meeting July 31 some 400 of the village's 1,400 eligible voters attached their signatures and fingerprints to a recall petition demanding Chen's removal as mayor and new elections.
When local officials posted budget tables on a bulletin board outside the village hall, they only stirred up more anger and charges that the mayor had misused annual revenue.
"Most villagers were outraged when they saw these tables," said Feng Manlan, noting that the mayor hadn't consulted residents on a series of expenditures.
Dozens of villagers took over the three-story village hall, using a wooden bench to barricade the office in which the budget books are kept. They said they'd already detected one effort to penetrate the room and steal the books, and that they awaited permission for an audit.
"Every evening, two or three people sit on the bench so that no one can get in," Feng Weibiao said as workers collected straw mats where squatters had slept overnight.
Unable to get in his office, beleaguered Mayor Chen has kept a low profile. His cellular phone was turned off Thursday, and he couldn't be reached for comment.
Events came to a head Aug. 16, just as Beijing announced that it was creating special police riot units in 36 major cities to quell unrest. In Taishi, villagers surrounded four vehicles carrying district officials, who summoned the new Guangzhou riot unit. Quickly, Taishi swarmed with helmeted police wielding batons.
An 18-year-old man and a 74-year-old woman fell to the ground under blows from police, and remained in a regional hospital this week. Eight people were arrested.
Surrounding township authorities issued a statement saying police "were very restrained" and accusing "several trouble-making individuals" of manipulating the protest. The statement promised to look into villagers' complaints. A regional civil affairs bureau, meanwhile, has until next Wednesday (August 31) to rule on the recall petition and a new election.
Villagers, in the interim, are on high alert. An escort of villagers on motorcycles accompanied a vehicle that was carrying journalists to ensure that police didn't intercept it and block reporting of the conflict.
"They are very determined. They know that if they fail, the village officials will take revenge," said Lu, the grassroots elections expert.
Yet if regional officials accede to the recall petition, it could let loose an avalanche in villages where dissatisfaction with officials is running high.
"If Taishi villagers succeed in removing their leader, then villagers all around the Pearl River Delta will follow suit," said Guo, the lawyer. "It can have a domino effect."
Revolt in Chinese village reflects rising tide of discontent
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#1 Revolt in Chinese village reflects rising tide of discontent
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Suck it down commie bitches!!!
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This is one pissed off village.BEIJING (AFP) - Chinese police have arrested about 50 people staging a hunger strike in southern China in protest at a village chief's alleged corruption and land requisition, a lawyer said.
"About five o'clock this morning, the Panyu district government mobilised military police and arrested the villagers who are on hunger strike," lawyer Guo Feixiong told AFP.
Around 100 people from Taishi village began a hunger strike early Wednesday in front of the Panyu district government office in Guangdong province.
They are demanding the removal of a village chief who they say had illegally sold their land and pocketed gains.
Guo said the rest of the protestors fled after police started arresting people, while several hundred villagers from Taishi wanting to reinforce the protest were barred by police from entering Panyu district.
A journalist covering the incident for the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post said she was followed and surrounded by several people believed to be plainclothes police officers. The windows of her taxi were smashed.
"I feel threatened, no one is saying anything other than that they want to take me to the police station," she told AFP in a hasty phone call.
A series of protests over land rights in rural China have highlighted the increasingly contentious problem which threatens to boil over into larger-scale conflicts across the country.
The Panyu district government and police refused to comment.
A communist party secretary surnamed Zhang at the Yuwotou township government, which has jurisdiction over Taishi village, denied that arrests have been made.
"No, there was no such thing," she said, adding that villagers should have submitted an application to protest but failed to do so.
Two weeks ago an estimated 800 people from Taishi clashed with hundreds of police, resulting in several injuries and the arrests of seven residents.
Land requisition by the state has become one of China's most contentious social issues, with an increasing number of evicted people accusing government officials of illegal land grabs to enrich the ruling elite.
In China all land is owned by the state, giving local officials tremendous powers.
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We doing this completly legally of course, but first thing we're gonna do is make sure you have no legal counsil. Don't you trust us, we're the communist party!BEIJING (AFP) - Government officials in China's southern Guangdong province have vowed to resolve an irksome land dispute case in accordance with the law, as they rounded up lawyers and told them to stay away from the issue.
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The case involves farmers in Taishi village who have gathered enough names to legally have village head Chen Jinsheng removed from power over corrupt land practices, but have been obstructed by powerful local bureaucrats.
Academics and lawyers around China view the case as a test of the central government's determination to fully implement laws on village democracy, especially in Guangzhou city, the capital of China's richest province.
"After accepting this case we will handle it in accordance with the law," a spokesman for the Guangzhou municipal government surnamed Liang told AFP.
"Right now we are doing an audit of the books. We will handle this in accordance with the results of the audit and in accordance with the law."
For weeks civil affairs officials from Guangzhou's Panyu district which oversees the village refused to accept the petition and repeatedly sent in police to arrest villagers and break up peaceful protests.
After finally accepting the case last week, police again Monday descended on the village, arresting 48 residents and storming off with account books that villagers insist contain evidence of Chen's wrongdoing.
"We still don't know why they did this to us, we wanted to protect the accounts as evidence in the case, now the government has the evidence," Taishi villager Feng Weihan said.
As of Wednesday morning, 24 of the arrested villagers had been released with some 100 villagers gathering around the village government offices waiting for the release of others.
Meanwhile Yang Zaixin, a lawyer with the Beijing-based Empowerment and Law rights group, disappeared into police custody as he arrived in Guangzhou to look into a separate land dispute case.
"Yang Zaixin was detained on Sunday and kept for the whole day and interrogated and threatened," Hou Wenzhuo, head of the group that has sought to educate farmers on their legal rights, told AFP.
"He was told that our group should not get involved with any of the land cases in Guangdong province."
Lawyers for the Taishi villagers were not immediately available for comment.
"it takes two sides to end a war but only one to start one. And those who do not have swords may still die upon them." Tolken