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Thousands rally in China land grab village
by Staff Writers
Wukan, China (AFP) Dec 15, 2011

Residents of Wukan, a fishing village in the southern province of Guangdong, rally to demand the government take action over illegal land grabs and the death in custody of a local leader on December 15, 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. Image courtesy AFP.

Thousands of residents of a Chinese village under police blockade rallied Thursday to demand the government take action over illegal land grabs and the death in custody of a local leader.

The people of Wukan -- a fishing village in the wealthy southern province of Guangdong with about 13,000 inhabitants -- accuse corrupt local officials of stealing communal land without compensating them.

Wukan has been the scene of repeated and at times violent protests over land seizures, a hugely contentious issue in China, where authorities are accused of colluding with developers in lucrative real estate deals.

Local anger boiled over with the death Sunday in police custody of a village leader tasked with negotiating with authorities over the row. The village, which has been abandoned by local officials, is now surrounded by police checkpoints.

An AFP correspondent at the scene said the village was peaceful but there was an atmosphere of defiance, and anger over the death of Xue Jinbo.

Authorities say the 42-year-old suffered a heart attack while in custody. But relatives who have seen his body say it showed signs of torture, and suspect he was beaten to death.

"I feel very surprised about that because my father has never had heart problems. I cannot say definitely that he was beaten to death, but I can tell you, he was been beaten in many places," his daughter Xue Jianwan told AFP.

"There were bruises everywhere. If they did not beat him, where could the bruises have come from?"

Residents marched around the village outskirts on Thursday carrying photographs of Xue and banners calling on the central government to come to their aid.

"We are very scared that more people will be arrested, but we cannot accept that one of our respected leaders was beaten to death," one of them said.

"We have no justice. Our land has been taken away and villagers are arrested and beaten to death. The people here are furious, but we have to remain calm. Only the central government can rescue us from corrupt officials," added the villager, whose name AFP is not using for her safety.

"We are not against the government, but only wanted to get our farmland back," said another.

"We make a living on the land, and we are very sad to lose it."

Anger over the land issue reached a peak in September when angry locals stormed a police station, ransacking police vehicles and briefly taking local officials hostage.

Lawyers say that official land grabs that started in the late 1990s, as China's economy picked up steam, have been exacerbated by the government's control of all land and local officials' reliance on land to make profits.

The Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, an official government think tank, says land disputes account for 65 percent of rural China's "mass incidents" -- the one-party government's euphemism for large protests.

China's weibos -- microblogging sites similar to Twitter -- buzzed Thursday with speculation that the protests were spreading to neighbouring villages with the same grievances over land grabs, although this could not be confirmed.

Villagers said they planned to hold a memorial ceremony for Xue Jinbo on Friday, even though his body has not yet been released.

He was among five men arrested last week for involvement in the September riots.

"My father did not have land, he was a businessman. But he did this because he thinks it is the right thing to do," his daughter told AFP. "The villagers have been suffering for a long time."

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China plans tighter film censorship
Beijing (AFP) Dec 15, 2011 - China is planning to tighten already strict movie censorship to bar anti-government sentiments and messages of religious fanaticism from the screen, the government said Thursday.

The proposal, posted to the web site of the State Council, or cabinet, comes as more and more Chinese stream to the movies for entertainment, boosting box office takings by more than 60 percent last year to about $1.5 billion.

It is part of a draft film law now under consideration that would raise to 13 the subject categories not allowed. Previous bans cover too much smoking on screen, explicit sex and graphic violence.

Under the proposals, China would bar "incitement to resist or undermine the constitution" and the "promotion of religious fanaticism" from films.

A further proposed ban would bar any film from "promoting" illegal drugs or terrorist activity.

Critics of censorship enforced by the film bureau of the State Administration of Radio Film and Television say that the rules hamper filmmakers' freedoms to tell realistic contemporary stories.

China already bans the screening of films deemed politically sensitive and moviemakers wanting their works to be seen by the general public tend to steer clear of topics they know will fall foul of censors.

The country does not have a film ratings system like those used by governments in other developed nations to allow moviegoers to choose for themselves what is and is not appropriate to see.



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SINO DAILY
Besieged China villagers vow to keep up protests
Lufeng, China (AFP) Dec 14, 2011
Residents of a southern Chinese village that has become a flashpoint for anger over government land grabs vowed Wednesday to continue protesting despite a six-day police blockade. The village of Wukan in Guangdong province - the scene of violent clashes with officials in September - has been under siege since last Thursday, and residents say food and water supplies are now running low. ... read more


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