Chongqing, thousands demonstrate against government
Beijing (AsiaNews) - Thousands of protesters clashed with
police in recent days in Chongqing, a
megalopolis in southern China,
to protest against a merger that threatens to throw them into poverty. The
demonstrators, about 10 thousand people, are demanding the Council of State
withdraw the order to unify Wansheng district with Qijiang county. Some
sources say dozens of people were injured, the central government has sent
about 1,000 police in riot gear to stop the riots.
A
few days from the purge and state indictment of Bo Xilai, his former domain has
once again returned to the spotlight. Residents
of Wansheng, a mining district of the megalopolis, fear losing the generous
state subsidies granted by the government to the mining industry and so have
chosen violent protest. The
shops are closed and the streets are guarded by the army and local police.
A
resident explains the reasons for the revolt: "Qijiang will eat up our
district like a snake, leaving 280 thousand people in extreme poverty. There
will be no health care or pension. It is obvious that we are angry." The
government project is to create a "mega-district" to make it more
competitive than the two previous entities.
But
residents of Wansheng - which has long established itself as a thriving
district from an economic standpoint - fear that those of Qijiang will take
advantage of the situation weighing heavily on the overall budget and blocking
the release of funds for public welfare from Beijing. This
fear is unfounded: as explained by Professor Larry Lang [see: As
China's govt cheats, its economy is "on the brink of bankruptcy", Chinese scholar
says] provinces
and districts can now only rely on their own income, since the central
government is cheating on the accounts and risks implosion.
The
mayor of Chongqing,
Huang Qifan, visited the area several days ago and assured the government's
commitment to "balance and coordinate" the development of rural and
urban areas. In
addition, the local government has issued a statement to "reassure the
people" about pensions and the health care system, which "will
continue as usual," and added that Wansheng "will continue to enjoy
the usual policies in its favor".
06/10/2020 14:52