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Published on ShanghaiDaily.com (http://www.shanghaidaily.com/) http://www.shanghaidaily.com/sp/article/2008/200807/20080703/article_365514.htm Guizhou government blames 'public grudges' for riot Created: 2008-7-3 16:05:19 Author:Lydia Chen PUBLIC grudges over failures to solve major social conflicts was one of the reasons behind the weekend violence in Guizhou that at its peak involved up to 30,000 people and the torching of government buildings, the province has acknowledged. Resentment grew among some people after appeals to address their legitimate rights were dismissed or neglected by local authorities. These disputes involved issues such as mass relocations, coal mine ownership and reforms of state-owned firms, the Guizhou government said in a statement that was reached at a meeting yesterday, Guizhou Daily reported today. The meeting was chaired by Wang Fuyu, deputy Party secretary of Guizhou, and vice provincial governor Huang Kangsheng, the report said. Wang and Huang are the top supervisors of a work team handling the Saturday riot. Up to 30,000 people were involved in the protest, which was prompted by a police report into the death of 17-year-old Li Shufen. Police concluded she had drowned, but her family and relatives say she was raped and murdered. The protest turned violent and rioters mobbed Weng'an County government office buildings on Saturday. More than 150 police and protesters were injured. About 160 offices and more than 40 vehicles were burned. Weng'an's bad social security conditions caused a sense of insecurity and instability among the public, which was another key reason for the riot, the report said, citing the provincial government's statement. Robberies, looting, theft and street fights are common in Weng'an, where about 600 to 800 criminal cases occur every year, the statement said, adding that only half of the cases can be solved. Police in Guizhou yesterday announced a four-month crackdown on gangs accused of "exacerbating violence" and "providing gasoline, machetes, clubs and fireworks" to people with ill intentions. The government statement also said that some officials are "afraid to face the public" and "not willing to work patiently to resolve disputes with members of the public." "Some of them took soft stances when enforcing laws and some even put social relations ahead of the country's laws," the statement said. Some local officials and schools were also to blame for not paying enough attention to "moral education", the statement said. Fifty-nine people were detained for their alleged involvement in the riot. Sixteen are still in police custody. The provincial government has reopened the investigation into the girl's death since the riot. A third autopsy on Li was carried out by five experts from the Guizhou Provincial Department of Public Security and the Provincial Higher People's Court yesterday. Her father, Li Xiuhua, aunt Luo Xingju and a local villager who was elected to witness the autopsy were present. Li's body was buried in her hometown of Yuhua Township yesterday afternoon. Hundreds of villagers attended the funeral. Copyright © 2001-2009 Shanghai Daily Publishing House |