China : 3,000 villagers protest ,ten injured in the clash
More than 3,000 villagers in eastern China blocked a highway and clashed with police while protesting alleged official corruption in a land compensation deal, a human rights monitor and a witness said Sunday.
Ten residents of Shipu town, in Zhejiang province, were injured in the clash with more than 300 riot police Saturday, the Hong Kong-based Information Center for Human Rights and Democracy said in a faxed statement.
Another resident said thousands of people had been staging a sit-in on the land for nearly a week.
Protests are common in China over land seizures. Local government officials often confiscate land for infrastructure and housing projects, with little or no compensation.
The resident of Shipu, interviewed by phone, said the protesters accuse local officials of arranging a deal in which villagers were paid far less than market value for their land. He would only give his surname, Chen.
The villagers were apparently leasing the roughly 800-acre (320-hectare) stretch of land to the Changguo Saltern company, which used it for saltworks. The land was recently sold to be developed into a science and technology park, the human rights center said.
Chen and the human rights center said thousands of villagers have staged sit-ins at the salt fields since July 20. At least 3,000 villagers were there Sunday, Chen said.
A man on duty at Changguo confirmed by phone that several thousand villagers blocked a highway Saturday and said several were taken away by police.
The employee, who refused to give his name, said the villagers believed the land was worth three times the price the local government had set — 20,000 yuan (US$2,900) per mu. A mu is a Chinese measure of land equal to about 0.15 acres (0.06 hectares).
"The villagers want the local authorities to address the corruption and the central government to intervene in this case, but some local officials have been preventing this information from getting to the relevant authorities," Chen said.



