Dec 162012
 

Chen Pingfu, a former music teacher now street musician, incurred the wrath of Chinese authorities when he began posting about injustices he and those around him had suffered at the hands of officials.

He was charged with inciting subversion but as the case was being heard all charges were dropped. No reason has been given but Pingfu was hardly fermenting rebellion he was just trying to highlight poor treatment.

However such criticism on social media and the internet has drawn a swift and harsh reaction in the past. But in this case the authorities appear to have had second thoughts.

China is a governed by a repressive regime but that does not mean all those working for it share the extreme values. It is possible that people in senior positions saw the case for what it was and canned it. On the other hand 12,000 comments following just one story about Pingfu broadcast in Hong Kong may have been a deciding factor. In either case a vigorous social media campaign seems to do no harm which is encouraging to China’s netizens.

 

chen-pingfu.jpg Ezine Shanghaiist posted this report and picture on the case.

Chen Pingfu, a laid-off teacher turned street musician from Lanzhou, Gansu Province, was always something of an unlikely dissident. But when Chen began posting online about the injustices he suffered and saw around him, he was accused of “inciting subversion of state power” – the same charge that earned Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo eleven years in prison.

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Feb 262008
 

RFA/Mandarin — Monday, Feb. 25, 2008. From Hong Kong-based reporter Qiao Long:

Last week in southern China’s Nanning city, a vegetable peddler was beaten up by urban management officers, triggering confrontation between angry bystanders and the officers for about two hours.

According to China’s Nanguo Zaobao newspaper, on the afternoon of Feb. 23, urban management officers, also known as the chengguan, from the Liangqing District confiscated the vegetables belonging to a peddler. The thing happened at the Qianjin Road in the Dashatian area. The middle-aged peddler then picked up a brick to hit the officers’ car. The officers jumped out of the car, trying to pull the peddler into their car. In the process, a witness said, four or five urban management officers beat up the peddler with sugar cane, or kicked him. Angry bystanders encircled the two cars of the officers, blocking their exit. Continue reading »

Jan 102008
 

Thousands of ordinary Chinese citizens have gathered outside government offices in the central city of Tianmen, Hubei province, in a popular wave of anger and sympathy following the beating to death of a man last week by law enforcement officials.

Wei Wenhua, the manager of a water resources construction company connected to the municipal government water resources department, and a member of the ruling Communist Party, was beaten to death by a dozen urban management officials, or chengguan, on Jan. 7.

The officials were angry because he filmed them, using his mobile phone camera, clashing with local residents opposed to waste-dumping on a site near their homes. Continue reading »

Jan 092008
 
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UPDATE: more on the Wei Wenhua story here, including reaction from Chinese netizens.  

Several thousand people gathered outside the municipal government buildings in Tianmen city, in the central Chinese province of Hubei Wednesday, RFA’s Mandarin service reports. They were demanding redress for the beating to death by an urban management official (城管 – chengguan) of a construction company executive after he recorded a street-side fracas with his mobile phone. Continue reading »

Dec 102007
 

Lan Yuanxian, a 16 year-old migrant worker from Anhui, was beaten up by two or three officials from the municipal management bureau of the Guilin city government, she told RFA’s Cantonese service(ZH) from her hospital bed.

The incident began outside the Ximen vegetable market in the Xiangshan district of the city when a truck wanted to make a delivery of oil to a shop there. Lan’s bicycle was parked in the way for about five minutes, for which local city management officials tried to fine her 50 yuan. Lan protested and argued with them, and was beaten up. Another woman was beaten with truncheons when she tried to stop them.

The incident sparked protests in which more than 1,000 people encircled the city officials’ cars, refusing to leave. More than 50 riot police were called in to disperse the crowd, which took about two hours. Continue reading »