. Medical and Hospital News .




.
SINO DAILY
China residents vow protest as govt suspends plant
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 21, 2011



Demonstrators in southern China angered by the death of two people during clashes with police said Wednesday they would protest again even after authorities agreed to suspend a power plant project.

Residents in Haimen, a town in Guangdong province, said a 15-year-old boy and a middle-aged woman died and more than 100 were injured when police fired tear gas and beat protesters on Tuesday.

AFP has not been able to confirm the deaths independently. Oriental TV, a Hong Kong-based television station, said six residents had died and nearly 200 were injured in the violent confrontation.

Demonstrators have vowed to protest again on Wednesday even after the Shantou city government, which is responsible for Haimen, issued a statement saying it would suspend the coal-fired power plant project.

"We haven't heard that the local government will suspend the project. If we hear of that we will stop the protest," a protester surnamed Zheng told AFP.

Residents are also demanding the power plant be moved, saying it is damaging their health.

State media reported last month that a 7.4-billion-yuan ($1.17-billion) expansion of the power plant had failed environmental tests and toxic metals found in local waterways "exceeded the standard level".

Three decades of rapid economic growth have left most waterways in China severely contaminated and protests over environmental pollution are increasing.

AFP calls to the Shantou government went unanswered, but an official statement Wednesday said it would suspend the project and refer the case to "supervisory authorities" to handle.

In the meantime further protests were banned, it said.

"The Shantou government requires people in Haimen to obey the law and deal with problems through legal channels," the statement said.

"People who act against the laws will be held accountable".

Haimen is only around 115 kilometres (70 miles) northeast of Wukan village, where residents have been in open revolt against the local government after what they say is years of illegal land grabs.

There is no indication that the protests are related, but they are part of an upsurge in social unrest in Guangdong, China's wealthiest province and the country's manufacturing hub.

A Haimen protester told AFP on Tuesday that 100 to 200 riot police had confronted residents and fired tear gas.

Related Links
China News from SinoDaily.com




.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries


China to release protest leaders: village spokesman
Wukan, China (AFP) Dec 21, 2011 - Chinese authorities have agreed to release three villagers detained for leading September protests against land grabs, a community spokesman said Wednesday after meeting a senior official.

"The three will be released one after another today and tomorrow," Lin Zulian told residents of the southern village of Wukan, after talks aimed at defusing a long stand-off with local authorities.

The local government also agreed to release the body of Xue Jinbo, a protest leader who died in police custody and who villagers believe was beaten to death, "in due course", but did not say when, Lin told the villagers.

"I'm very satisfied with the outcome of the meeting," he said. "This is not a victory, but it is a beginning."

The 13,000 residents of Wukan, a fishing village in the wealthy southern province of Guangdong, have effectively been governing themselves since late September, when they chased out local Communist leaders who they say had been stealing their land for years.

The villagers' anger boiled over this month when five villagers were detained for their involvement in September clashes with police and one died in custody.

They had planned to leave the village and march on local government headquarters in the nearby town of Lufeng on Wednesday to press their demands.

But villagers postponed the protest after deputy provincial party secretary Zhu Mingguo said in a televised speech that their demands were "reasonable", admitted the government had made mistakes, and agreed to meet their unofficial spokesman, Lin.

The government has also lifted police checkpoints that have surrounded Wukan for more that a week.

Lin said the issue of stolen land had yet to be resolved, although Zhu has promised the villagers will be compensated.



.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



SINO DAILY
Police in China fire tear-gas, beat protesters: witnesses
Beijing (AFP) Dec 20, 2011
Police fired tear-gas and beat demonstrators who stormed government buildings in southern China on Tuesday to protest a power plant, witnesses said, in the latest violent unrest to hit the country. Residents of Haimen, a town in the province of Guangdong, are demanding the coal-fired plant be moved, saying it is damaging their health, demonstrators told AFP by telephone. They said a 15-y ... read more


SINO DAILY
Geography, squatting blamed for Philippine floods

Small fire at Japan nuclear lab; no radiation leak

Microfinancing lifts tsunami-hit Japan firms

Flood-hit Philippines prepares for mass burials

SINO DAILY
Lockheed Martin Delivers GPS 3 Pathfinder Satellite to Denver on Schedule

Galileo in tune as first navigation signal transmitted to Earth

Glonass satnav system targets Latin America and India

Lightweight GPS tags help research track animals of all sizes

SINO DAILY
Mind reading machines on their way: IBM

I wanna talk like you

Starving orangutans might help to better understand obesity and eating disorders in humans

Follow your nose

SINO DAILY
Barracuda babies: Novel study sheds light on early life of prolific predator

Evolution at warp speed: Hatcheries change salmon genetics after a single generation

Legumes give nitrogen-supplying bacteria special access pass

Butterflies: 'Twice-punished' by habitat fragmentation and climate change

SINO DAILY
Journals mull publishing killer flu virus details

Hong Kong school closed in bird flu scare

A logistics approach to malaria in Africa

Nighttime images help track disease from the sky

SINO DAILY
Communist official heads to China protest village

China villagers warned against protest march

Police in China fire tear-gas, beat protesters: witnesses

China puts rights lawyer back in jail: Xinhua

SINO DAILY
China starts Mekong patrols

China deploys patrol boats on Mekong: state media

Seychelles invites China to set up anti-piracy base

Britain detains seven suspected pirates in Seychelles

SINO DAILY
Walker's World: 2012 looks grim

Outside View: A second Great Recession?

Location, location, location: Economists document key role of spatial component in economic growth

Japan to buy Chinese bonds: report


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement