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signatory
01-11-2008, 07:26 AM
(CNN) -- Authorities have fired an official in central China after city inspectors reportedly beat to death a man who filmed their confrontation with villagers, China's Xinhua news agency reports.

The killing has sparked outrage in China, with thousands expressing outrage in Chinese Internet chat rooms, often the only outlet for public criticism of the government.

The incident has also alarmed advocates of press freedom, who say municipal authorities had no right to attack a man for simply filming them.

Police have detained 24 municipal inspectors and are investigating more than 100 in the death of Wei Wenhua, a 41-year-old construction company executive, Xinhua reported on Friday.

The swift action by officials reflects concerns that the incident could spark larger protests against authorities, whose heavy-handed approach often arouses resentment.

On Monday Wei happened on a confrontation in the central Chinese province of Hubei between city inspectors and villagers protesting over the dumping of waste near their homes.

A scuffle developed when residents tried to prevent trucks from unloading the rubbish, Xinhua said.

When Wei took out his cell phone to record the protest, more than 50 municipal inspectors turned on him, attacking him for five minutes, Xinhua said. Wei was dead on arrival at a Tianmen hospital, the report said.

Qi Zhengjun, chief of the urban administration bureau in the city of Tianmen, lost his job over the incident, Xinhua reported Friday.

The beating was condemned online. "It's no longer news that urban administrators enforce the law with violence," said an editorial on the news Web site Northeast News, according to The Associated Press.

"But now someone has been beaten to death on site. It has brought us not surprise, but unspeakable anger."

Chen Yizhong, a columnist on Xinhua's Web site, asked why violence by city inspectors is allowed to continue. "Cities need administration, but urban administrators need to be governed by law first," he wrote.

An international press freedom group, Reporters Without Borders, protested the killing.

"Wei is the first 'citizen journalist' to die in China because of what he was trying to film," the group said in a statement.

"He was beaten to death for doing something which is becoming more and more common and which was a way to expose law-enforcement officers who keep on overstepping their limits."

http://edition.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/asiapcf/01/11/china.blogger/index.html

Nephilim
01-11-2008, 07:39 AM
thats quite shocking.

i wonder when those high horses in china will realize that their lands reputation simply suffers by such actions...

i really dont envy the people who are livin there:-(

Ordie
01-11-2008, 02:22 PM
When is comes to domestic issues, China's leaders are too thin skinned (si yao mianzi hou shou zui). They will bend over backwards to cater whoever makes noise at the expense of setting sound policies to begin with.

However, China's leaders are too thick skinned (Lianpi hou) before foreigners at the expense of pragmatic international relations.

The way I see it the chickens have come home to roost. China cannot advance economically and socially unless they address the issues of transparency, rule of law and environmental justice.

PS: Excuse my translation, I'm teaching myself some Mandarin by way of a dictionary and eating Dim Sum every weekend.

Litti
01-11-2008, 02:56 PM
Shocking, absolutely dsgusting but something you can expect from the chinese authorities. They have no sympathy for people who live outside the big cities.

They just dump waste to their backyards, tell them to buzz off when they construct new factories and kill people who resist. You basically cant communicate with the police if you are a local person.

J-10
01-12-2008, 11:30 AM
The way I see it the chickens have come home to roost. China cannot advance economically and socially unless they address the issues of transparency, rule of law and environmental justice.

PS: Excuse my translation, I'm teaching myself some Mandarin by way of a dictionary and eating Dim Sum every weekend.

Well say. IMO China's economy is moving to marketing economy, but social system lag behind. A real marketing economy must work in a more democratic and transparent civic society.

This is a article that a Chinese media analyse this incident, you can try to read it. http://news.21cn.com/today/zhuanlan/2008/01/09/4131990.shtml

femaleMP
01-14-2008, 02:54 AM
Let us not fool ourselves into thinking China is anything other than a despotic bloodthirsty totalitarian regime that oppress and murders it's own citizens at the slightest provocation. Just being a Christian can cost you your life.

Calanen
01-14-2008, 03:42 AM
Let us not fool ourselves into thinking China is anything other than a despotic bloodthirsty totalitarian regime that oppress and murders it's own citizens at the slightest provocation. Just being a Christian can cost you your life.

Being anything that is mildy troublesome to the central government.