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Rebel China village revolution unlikely to spread
by Staff Writers
Wukan, China (AFP) March 7, 2012

China confirms Tibetan woman self-immolated: Xinhua
Beijing (AFP) March 7, 2012 - Chinese authorities said a Tibetan woman who died after setting herself on fire in northwestern China on Saturday had suffered a head injury before the incident, state media reported.

Overseas rights groups say three Tibetans, including the woman in Gansu province, have self-immolated in China in recent days as Beijing tightens security ahead of the sensitive anniversary of deadly 2008 riots.

Tsering Kyi, reported to be aged between 16 and 20, set herself alight on Saturday at a vegetable market in Maqu county, Xinhua said late Tuesday, confirming earlier reports by activist groups.

Xinhua said the woman was a school student and had suffered "occasional fainting spells" after hitting her head on a radiator in a classroom and falling into a coma.

"The medical treatment held up her studies and her school scores began to decline, which put a lot of pressure on her and made her lose her courage for life and study," Xinhua said, citing local police.

The Xinhua report did not say when the accident happened nor did it mention the other two self-immolations that occurred on Sunday and Monday.

An 18-year-old man self-immolated on Monday in restive Aba prefecture in the southwestern province of Sichuan, a day after a mother of four died after setting herself alight in the same region, according to London-based Free Tibet and International Campaign for Tibet.

These same rights groups say more than 20 people have set themselves on fire in Tibetan-inhabited areas of China over the past year, mostly in Sichuan, in protest at what they see as repressive Chinese rule.

China has substantially increased security in its Tibetan-inhabited areas since the deadly riots which began in the Tibet region's capital, Lhasa, in March 2008 before spreading to other areas.

Beijing accuses the Dalai Lama, Tibet's spiritual leader, of inciting the self-immolations in a bid to split Tibet from the rest of the nation.

Li Changping, a senior communist official in Sichuan, said Wednesday the series of self-immolations would not disrupt the stable development of Tibetan-inhabited regions, Xinhua reported.

Li, speaking at the country's annual parliamentary meeting in Beijing, blamed the unrest on the Dalai Lama and his supporters and said their activities were "doomed to fail".


Residents of a Chinese village who voted for new leaders in weekend elections after rising up against corrupt officials are hoping they will become a model of democracy in the one-party state.

But experts are more sceptical. They doubt the victory will be replicated in other areas with similar grievances and say Wukan's energetic and youthful new leaders face an uphill struggle to resolve villagers' long-standing complaints.

Villagers began protesting in September, driving out leaders they say had sold off much of their land over the years to enrich themselves.

When one of the protest leaders died in police custody in December, villagers took their protest a step further, barricading roads leading into Wukan and facing off with security forces for 10 days.

Communist Party authorities backed down and promised the residents rare concessions, including pledges to allow village polls to be held in an open manner -- a first in Wukan.

"Authorities say they want to make Wukan an experiment in democracy and an economic experiment," said 26-year-old Zhang Jiancheng, one of seven members of the new leadership committee in Wukan, in the prosperous southern province of Guangdong.

"They want to build it up to make it into a model village."

The Wukan election came after residents rose up against corrupt leaders in a country that does not normally tolerate dissent, and has generated huge excitement among China's growing army of Internet users.

"We must not only expand the Wukan experience to the rest of Guangdong, but also expand this enlightened experience -- which Guangdong dared to implement first -- to the whole country," posted one.

The election attracted scores of onlookers from different parts of the province and from further afield -- including villagers from elsewhere in the country desperate to publicise their own grievances.

But in an indication authorities were unwilling to let the so-called "Wukan model" spread beyond village borders, those petitioners were all quickly carted away.

"There are two aspects to the Wukan events -- the protests and the village election," said Xiong Wei, a Beijing-based grassroots democracy activist who spent months in Wukan.

"The protests will be difficult to replicate elsewhere, as the success of protests in Wukan was due to several specific elements such as the number of people living in Wukan, how united they are."

But he said the voting process could easily be emulated.

Unlike in Wukan, where leaders ruled uninterrupted for over 40 years, other villages in China have held direct elections for decades, although they do not always proceed smoothly and the committees wield little power.

Wang Yang -- the hugely influential party boss of Guangdong, who is widely viewed as politically progressive -- has played down the significance of the weekend ballot.

"What they did was implement (the laws) in a very complete way, correcting the way in which the elections had been held in the past," he said in Beijing this week.

Wang has been praised for his deft handling of the situation in Wukan. Zheng Yongnian, politics professor at the National University of Singapore, said he had implemented other small-scale reforms in Guangdong to decentralise power.

"It's an important step in China's political process... He is trying to make it so the government manages less, but well," said Zheng.

In Wukan, Zhang said the committee had bold plans that included resolving the land issues, improving sanitation and rebuilding old houses.

And in a notable difference to other villages, Lin Zulian, who was elected head of the committee at the weekend, was also appointed party chief of Wukan several months ago -- a position that wields more authority.

"The power often resides with the party secretary, who is appointed by the township government," said Graeme Smith, an expert on rural China at the University of Technology in Sydney.

"It's a little bit meaningless if the guy who ultimately has the say in the village is not elected by the villagers. So that's the radical departure in Wukan."

But experts still questioned how much the village committee would be able to improve things.

"In the end, the real power resides two rungs up the chain in the county government, which has enormous discretionary power," said Smith.

"If you're talking about meaningful democracy, it has to happen at that level."

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Young Chinese migrant goes from jail to elected leader
Wukan, China (AFP) March 7, 2012 - Accused of fomenting unrest in his village in southern China, Zhang Jiancheng was taken into police custody where a fellow protestor died, allegedly after a severe beating.

As he sat in his cell, the 26-year-old had no idea villagers in his native Wukan, angered by land grabs and his friend's death, had launched a bold revolt against the police -- all of which his brother was publicising online using a new iPad.

Now, in a remarkable reversal of fortune, Zhang has been elected to a new, youthful seven-member leadership committee, in landmark polls held at the weekend in his village in Guangdong province.

"We were successful, but it is a result Xue Jinbo paid for with his life and that's sad," said Zhang, a deeply serious and thoughtful figure who sports a trendy haircut and goatie, as he sat at table with his friends after the vote.

The election is seen as a victory for Wukan residents, whose anger over land grabs, graft, abuse of power and a lack of prospects for younger people are common throughout China.

It also highlights how connected young people are to the Internet -- even in rural backwaters such as Wukan, where many have little education, but are desperate for change and deeply attached to their home.

When Zhang turned 16, he dropped out of school and moved to the metropolis of Shenzhen where he worked odd jobs to help support his family and met his now wife, with whom he has a five-year-old daughter.

Until then, his mother had been the sole bread winner in the family, earning money to raise him, his four brothers and sisters and his sickly dad, in a small, basic house in a rundown alley in Wukan.

But he soon grew disillusioned with life in the big city.

"When you work away from home, you're considered an outsider and local people bully you," he said.

Back in his seaside village, though, work prospects were even bleaker, with most of residents' land sold off by corrupt leaders and a fishing industry that was becoming less and less profitable.

Anger was mounting and villagers began petitioning authorities in 2009, before staging protests in September last year -- which Zhang was instrumental in organising -- a move that landed him in prison with four other residents.

When Xue Jinbo -- one of those detained -- died in police custody in December, villagers took their demonstration a step further, barricading roads leading into Wukan and facing off with security forces for 10 days.

By the time Zhang was released two weeks later, the rebellion had ended with authorities granting rare concessions, including the right to hold free village polls -- allowed in China, but a first in Wukan.

The village's success is due in no small part to the diligence of young residents -- including Zhang's younger brother Zhang Jianxing -- who used microblogs to publicise their struggle.

In November, the 21-year-old borrowed money from friends to buy an iPad, camera and tripod that he never parts with, his fingers darting across the screen as he shows onlookers videos and photos posted online.

His 16-year-old friend Wu Jijin said older protest leaders now relied on Wukan's Internet-savvy youngsters to publicise the latest developments online.

As he sat discussing the weekend's events with his friends, Zhang Jiancheng allowed himself to relax and smile, finally.

"I used to really like joking around, I was optimistic about many things, but these events have changed my views," he said.

"If you want to change things, there's a price to pay. I hope the next generation will have a better life."



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SINO DAILY
Tibetan teen self-immolates in China: exile groups
Beijing (AFP) March 6, 2012
A teenager has become the third Tibetan to self-immolate in China in as many days, exile groups said, as Beijing tightens security ahead of the sensitive anniversary of deadly 2008 riots. The 18-year-old man shouted anti-government slogans as he set himself alight near a government office in southwestern Sichuan province's Aba prefecture, Free Tibet and International Campaign for Tibet said ... read more


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