Opinion and observation on a world gone crazy

Joe Gill, journalist and game inventor from Brighton, UK

Tuesday 2 August 2011

Death of a street vendor

It was just such an incident involving the death of a street vendor in Tunisia a few months ago that sparked the Arab revolutions. In that case, a street vendor immolated himself in protest at state harrassment. Last week in China, it was violence by state officials that sparked the protests.

Vendor’s death sparks riot in southern Chinese city

Thu, Jul 28, 2011 - Page 1

Angry residents in a southern Chinese city went on the rampage after officials reportedly beat to death a disabled fruit vendor, state media said yesterday, in the latest incident of social unrest in the world’s second-largest economy.

The China Daily said that thousands of people gathered on the streets of Anshun City in Guizhou Province on Tuesday afternoon, throwing stones at police and overturning a government vehicle.

The riot was sparked after urban management officers — a quasi-police force that enforces laws against begging and other petty offences — were suspected of beating the vendor to death, the newspaper said.

“The unidentified vendor died in front of the gate of a market ... which led to the gathering of the local people,” it cited a government statement as saying.

“Before the incident occurred, urban management officers were working in the area,” it added, saying the statement gave no other details.

The newspaper showed a picture of an urban management vehicle that had been overturned, along with smashed windows and doors that had been torn off.

Xinhua news agency said about 30 prοtesters and 10 police officers were injured in the unrest.

The elder brother of the dead man has “consented to [an] autopsy and asked police to seek justice,” it added. “Police are questioning six city management staff members involved in the case.”

Footage on China’s popular Youku.com Web site, the country’s answer to YouTube, showed a large crowd gathered in the street, and what seemed to be a body on the ground shaded by umbrellas.

An overturned vehicle could be seen in the distance, along with many police officers and a black armored car used by China’s riot police.

Reuters could not authenticate the footage, nor when it was taken. Calls to the Anshun government seeking comment went unanswered.

“It was a total mess,” one onlooker surnamed Jiang told the China Daily. “The people threw stones at the police officers and my feet were hit by flying rocks.”........

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