InvestorsHub Logo
Followers 72
Posts 101531
Boards Moderated 3
Alias Born 08/01/2006

Re: F6 post# 128582

Monday, 02/28/2011 1:56:02 AM

Monday, February 28, 2011 1:56:02 AM

Post# of 485419
Calls for protests in China met with brutality
By Damian Grammaticas BBC News, Beijing
28 February 2011 Last updated at 01:45 GMT


The police response was brutal and
totally out of proportion to the situation

The time was about 1330. Lines of Chinese police stood at the
entrance to Wangfujing, Beijing's most famous shopping street.


The authorities' anxiousness was palpable.

Dozens of police vans were parked on the roadside, uniformed men with dogs patrolled up and down, street cleaning vans drove up and down spraying water to keep people away, and a sudden rash of suspiciously unnecessary street repairs meant big hoardings had been put up.

It would have been farcical if it hadn't turned so brutal.

The reason for all this nervousness was the call that had gone out over the internet for Chinese people to stage their own "Jasmine Protests", copying the wave of democratic revolutions in the Middle East and north Africa.

The police were monitoring everyone going into the pedestrian zone. But unable to distinguish the protesters, who'd been called to "stroll" peacefully and silently past McDonald's restaurant at 1400, from genuine shoppers they focussed on picking out foreign reporters and cameramen.

Targeted campaign

A similar call a week ago had brought out just a handful of protesters. Since then stepped-up internet controls have been blocking any mention of the word "jasmine".

So relatively few people in China even know the call for protests has been made.


One cameraman was set upon by five men who
punched him in the face

There has also been a deliberate and targeted campaign to round up lawyers, activists, and bloggers, around a hundred people in total. Some have been detained, some disappeared, others threatened.

A few, who seem to have reposted internet messages calling for peaceful gatherings, face extremely serious subversion charges.

We were immediately singled out. Uniformed officers blocked our way a few hundred yards from McDonald's and demanded our press cards. Nervously they talked into mobile phones and handheld radios.

They stalled us, then barked at us to stop filming. Plainclothes men came and stood right in front of our camera so we couldn't take shots.

Urgent meeting

Ahead of this event there was a clear sign the police were on edge.

On Friday officers had called our news bureau, and many others in Beijing, to summon us for an urgent meeting.

We were warned that we must follow China's reporting rules. Again on Saturday phone calls were made to BBC staff and other journalists with more warnings.

About Damian Grammaticas

I'm the BBC's China correspondent. This is where I will share my thoughts on life in this rapidly changing economic giant

* More about Damian

China's reporting rules allow us to film on the street. For interviews we must seek the consent of interviewees. We stuck well within the rules. Even when the police blocked us without explanation we co-operated.

All around us it was obvious that at least half the people on the street were plainclothes state security officers. Some were snapping photographs of everyone, others were videoing everything, many had obvious earpieces plugged in and were mumbling on their radios.

There must have been hundreds of them. China has been pouring money into its domestic security apparatus in recent years and this is what it is for.

Then suddenly, a few minutes before 2pm, the crucial time for the "Jasmine" protests, the plainclothes thugs waded in.

Security goons

Without warning they shoved and pushed the BBC's cameraman. They grabbed at his camera and tried to rip it from his hands, bundling him a full 50 yards into a police van. They had earpieces in and were also taking orders.

Then the thugs turned on me. My hair was grabbed and pulled by one of the state security goons.
Continue reading the main story

They tried to pick me up and throw me bodily into the van.

I found myself lying on the floor as they repeatedly slammed the door on my leg which was still part of the way out of the truck, one, two, three times, maybe more. A few shoppers looked on in confusion.

The same thugs climbed into the van and threatened us again as we were driven to a nearby government office. Our details were taken and we were told we could not do interviews in the area because of "special circumstances".

Asked what the special circumstances were they ignored the question. And when told we did not want to do interviews, only take pictures, they again ignored us.

There were more foreign journalists there too. But it seems we got off lightly. One cameraman was set upon by five men who kicked, and punched him in the face, he had to go to hospital for treatment; another had his hand injured.

It was brutal and totally out of proportion to the situation.

It all seems to be evidence that China's Communist Party chiefs have been spooked by the popular protests sweeping the Middle East.

In those democratic revolutions ranks of ordinary people from developing countries have been rising against the autocracies that have monopolised power.

Tapping into fears

Many see parallels in China, also a developing nation with an authoritarian government, where calls for an end to corruption, to nepotism, to one party's monopoly on power all might find resonance.


As well as the police presence there were
plainclothes state security officers

China's Communist rulers often say democracy is a western idea unsuited to China's level of development. It's an argument that is challenged by what's been happening on the streets of Cairo, Tunis and elsewhere.

There are many reasons why a similar uprising seems highly unlikely in China.

The economy is growing, people generally believe life is getting better, the Communist Party keeps refreshing its leadership every decade, and it keeps spending vast amounts on internal security.

But the revolts in the Middle East do seem to have tapped into fears felt in China's leaders and its security apparatus.

Otherwise you have to ask, what explanation is there for sending the thugs to drag away and beat up journalists looking to take a few pictures of people strolling silently past McDonald's on a Sunday afternoon?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-12593328

Jonathan Swift said, "May you live all the days of your life!"

Join InvestorsHub

Join the InvestorsHub Community

Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.