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China's Leaders Increasingly Challenged by Social Unrest

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China's Leaders Increasingly Challenged by Social Unrest

Over the past year, China’s leadership has faced growing eruptions of public discontent over issues ranging from environmental and transportation safety concerns, to labor disputes and local corruption.


Consider the scene in the southeastern fishing village of Wukan, where hundreds of residents, young and old, raise their fists and voices calling for justice and chanting slogans such as the “Blood debt must be paid” and “Return our farm land.”

For months, Wukan residents have been protesting, denouncing local officials they say are corrupt and demanding the return of farm land they say was illegally seized for development.

The protests peaked in December when one of the town’s representatives, Xue Jinpo, died in police custody. Residents took control of Wukan, forcing Communist Party officials to flee and police to cordon off the village. Chinese authorities say Xue died of heart failure, but residents suspect foul play.

Such land grab protests, as they are called, are increasingly common in China. But the situation in Wukan highlights just how far some are willing to go.

Hu Xingdou, a professor at the Beijing Institute of Technology, says that if authorities do not take steps to address the public’s discontent, the unrest could get worse.

"One aspect that makes this a matter of high priority for the central government is that China has entered into a very risky period, not just one of an average risk level," said Hu. "I'm afraid that if the central government doesn't put some measures in place in the next five years or so, the whole of China could go out of control."


Simmering issues

And it’s not just land disputes Chinese citizens are protesting.


In October, protestors in the central city of Zhili, in Zhejiang province, flipped over cars, smashed public property and clashed with police during a dispute over taxes.

Scenes of the standoff caught on video showed hundreds out in the streets, and later scores of baton and shield-wielding police chasing off protesters.

Chinese economist Luo Xiaopeng says President Hu Jintao has done very little over the past 10 years to control local authorities, and that China now faces a crisis of governance. He believes this will top the agenda of Vice President Xi Jinping when he takes over for Mr. Hu next year.

“All of these environmental issues, education issues, public servant issues, have been accumulating for more than a decade, so it’s not just now," said Luo. "But I think that everybody realizes the crisis is coming, and the new leadership has to deal with it.”

Fears of an economic slowdown next year are also a big concern, says Bonnie Glaser, a China analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

“The Chinese leadership is, I think, very insecure at home, very worried about the domestic situation, the slowdown of the economy, and signs of growing unrest and uneasiness and this could get worse as the economic situation deteriorates," Glaser said.

A restless middle class

China’s booming economic growth over the past decade has swollen the ranks of the middle class, and they, too, are growing restless.

This is one of the Chinese government’s biggest concerns going forward, says Barry Naughton, an economist at University of California San Diego.

“They are not out on the streets throwing rocks through windows, but there is, I think, a sense of restlessness that is significant because these are the well educated people, they are concentrated in cities, they have a lot of skills and a lot of capabilities,” said Naughton.

In August, thousands of residents of the northeastern city of Dalian took to the streets. The protest, widely seen as a middle class uprising, called for the closure of a chemical plant. In the end, authorities gave in and agreed to shut down and relocate the plant.

The online factor

The Internet and social media helped to drive that protest, as it did with a nationwide uproar over a high-speed rail accident in July,

In Dalian, pictures and videos of the protest were posted online and the Internet was used to help organize the rally. In the aftermath of the train wreck, which left 41 people dead, China’s Twitter-like Weibo microblog not only documented details of those involved in the tragedy, but became a posting board for complaints about the government's response and broader concerns about incompetence.

Although China heavily censors the Internet, and critical or controversial postings are quickly removed, authorities remain anxious about what is said online, says Bonnie Glaser.

"At least once a day, and I’ve heard from some people that [it’s] twice a day, the Chinese leadership gets a list of what the most popular topics are that are being discussed on the Internet and the Chinese blogosphere."

In the wake of the train wreck, authorities have increased scrutiny of microblogs and stepped up efforts to control the spread of what they call "online rumors."

But as the protests in Wukan, Zhili and Dalian have shown, authorities are finding it increasingly difficult to keep a lid on everything.

China's Leaders Increasingly Challenged by Social Unrest | Asia | English
 
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At least we do not classify protestors as terrorists like some great democracies.
 
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indians living in a glass house but they couldnt resist to throw stones.
 
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that's good,let the government and leaders feel the heat of the people,it's good for the country's future.
 
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At least we do not classify protestors as terrorists like some great democracies.

nope, but you treat them as if they were.

another difference you forgot to mention is, unlike the usa, china jails and puts people under house arrest, for simply disagreeing with the government and being outspoken.

many protesters as you like to say, go to jail and often dont get out for a long time, or they get out in a body bag... maybe not even that.
 
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that's good,let the government and leaders feel the heat of the people,it's good for the country's future.
Then we will support your Govt. to put off the heat, and returning all islands in SCS(east sea) will be the price for the support :cool:
 
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At least we do not classify protestors as terrorists like some great democracies.
:lol: Of course you do. Occupy Tiananmen Square was just the beginning. Since then the Chinese leadership has been experiencing TENS OF THOUSANDS of 'occupiers' throughout the land annually.

Occupy Wukan is unusual...According to observers of known protests in China...

- Duration. The Wukan occupiers have maintained presence for several months. Observers of past protests noticed that once local officials paid off a few important figures in those protests and/or struck some kind of deals, the protests slowly began to dissipate. This time, the Wukan occupiers have proven highly resistant to governmental efforts at both bribery and attempts at compromises.

- Numbers. Past protests usually in the three-digits or at best four digits figures but the Occupy Wukan protests involved the entire village of 20,000.

- Response. The Wukan occupiers forced a much more fearful retreat of the local government officials and brought upon themselves the current attempt at physical isolation. The national government can distance itself from the local officials but it will be only a matter of time, and that time is running short, where the national government will be forced to step in and once it does, that physical isolation will become oppression. Already Internet searches for 'wukan' are filtered in China. We do not see that for the American 'Occupy' movement. It is one thing to protest against local corruption but it is another to question the mandate of 'The Party' as legitimate ruler of the country and the longer the 'Occupy Wukan' protest continues, the more likely the people will begin to explore the possibility of questioning that mandate. Beijing will send in tanks.
 
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