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Angry villagers kill policeman in China riot
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) April 20, 2012


Angry villagers protesting a local mining operation in southwest China attacked security forces with machetes and clubs, leaving one policeman dead and 15 injured, local authorities said Friday.

The riot occurred on Wednesday when police were dispatched to a government building in Yunnan province's Renhe township to try and persuade villagers staging a protest in front of the building to leave, authorities said.

"Suddenly villagers attacked the police with machetes and wooden clubs, leaving 16 injured, one of whom died later while receiving treatment," said a statement released by the government of Lijiang -- which oversees Renhe.

"During the incident, the police maintained a high level of restraint and not one villager was injured," it added.

Earlier this month, locals from Xiaoganqing village complained that the development of a local coal mine was endangering their lands and demanded their homes be moved and that they be compensated, the statement said.

A spokeswoman for the Lijiang government told AFP those complaints went unanswered and so the villagers moved their protest to the Renhe government building, where they stayed one week until the violence on Wednesday.

The spokeswoman, surnamed Yu, said the dead policeman was Wang Shaoyong, vice director of the public security bureau of Yongsheng county, which oversees the village.

Local police refused to tell AFP whether any of the villagers had been arrested following the incident.

China faces increasing pressure from public discontent over land disputes, which have in the past months sparked several violent protests against authorities in various parts of the country.

Earlier this month, hundreds of ethnic Mongols living in China's northern region of Inner Mongolia blocked roads as they protested the alleged illegal occupation of their land by a forestry firm.

Authorities arrested 22 people amid accusations of police brutality, rights groups say.

Land grabs also triggered a huge revolt against authorities in the southern village of Wukan in December, in a case that attracted international media attention and eventually led to rare concessions by the provincial government.

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China overturns tycoon's death sentence
Beijing (AFP) April 20, 2012 - China's high court overturned the death sentence on a former tycoon Friday, in a case that caused an uproar over the nation's use of capital punishment for economic crimes.

The State Supreme Court ordered the high court in eastern China's Zhejiang province to retry the case of Wu Ying.

It recommended that any death sentence should come with a two year reprieve -- a penalty almost always commuted to life in prison.

"The State Supreme Court has decided in accordance with the law not to approve the death sentence," a court statement said.

"From the overall consideration of the case, the implementation of the death penalty to Wu Ying should not be immediate."

Wu, 31, was sentenced to death in 2009 for swindling private investors out of some 380 million yuan ($60 million) in a case that drew attention to the state banking system's reluctance to provide capital to private businesses.

It also caused a public uproar due to Wu's relatively young age and to the state's widespread use of the death penalty, including in cases related to economic crimes.

Once one of China's richest woman, Wu built a business empire out of a modest family beauty salon that branched out into car rentals, clothing and then into real estate and commodities, state press reports said.

But her efforts to raise investment capital through China's murky world of private finance led to her arrest in 2007 on charges of illegal fund raising.

According to the London-based rights group Amnesty International, China annually executes more criminals than the rest of the world combined, although the actual numbers of people China puts to death remains a state secret.

Earlier this year, the US rights group Dui Hua reported that China had halved its executions since 2007, when its high court began reviewing death row cases, but that the country still puts around 4,000 people to death every year.



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'We are the serfs': Chinese debate Bo Xilai saga
Beijing (AFP) April 18, 2012
Yan Weilan combs through the Internet each day for any fresh news or rumours on China's rumbling political scandal that might have slipped past the country's hawk-like censors. The affair, which has toppled a high-flying politician amid allegations of corruption and murder, marks the first time many Chinese have seen a political drama involving the elite play out publicly in their lifetimes. ... read more


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