Posted on 11/01/2004 4:44:34 PM PST by Dr. Marten
Unrest at the Pubugou hydroelectric project on the Dadu river in Sichuan province began last Thursday and peaked Friday when locals marched on the Hanyuan county government offices carrying the corpse of a dead protester, Hong Kong's Sun Daily said.
Several people reportedly were killed in the clashes, while scores were injured as some 10,000 People's Armed Police descended on the area to maintain order, it said.
The demonstrations succeeded in stopping the project which was scheduled to dam the river on Thursday. Marchers also ransacked government offices in Hanyuan, it added.
"It happened on the 29th. It began during the day and lasted until eight or nine in the evening," a man at the Hanyuan county government who identified himself as Liu, told AFP.
"There were many many people involved, I don't know exactly how many."
The paper said 100,000 farmers were involved although an official at Dashu township said there were only 20,000 protesters and that by Monday construction on the dam project had recommenced.
"On the day of the protests there were about 20,000 people that went to the construction site. I don't know if anyone died because I didn't go to the scene," the official told AFP without identifying himself.
"At the momment no protesters are at the construction site."
The lands of some 100,000 farmers in 40 townships spread throughout three counties are expected to submerged by the dam project, he said.
The Dadu river is a tributary of the Min River, which evenutally flows into the Yangtze River, China's longest.
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From post: "The lands of some 100,000 farmers in 40 townships spread throughout three counties are expected to submerged by the dam project, he said. "
Wow - that's a lot of people to move - Be interesting to find out if that area was the best place for the dam - I do believe China needs to do something about all the floods - but did they decide on the area with wisdom -
just wondering -
"Wow - that's a lot of people to move - Be interesting to find out if that area was the best place for the dam - I do believe China needs to do something about all the floods - but did they decide on the area with wisdom"
The number of people being moved is nothing compared to the number that has already been moved. Fuling went under water at the turn of 2002/2003 as well as several other cities in the area.
As for the floods, they have been a problem to China since before the begining of the Chinese dynastys and the problem has only gotten worse thanks to poor agricultural policies and land abuse.
In the old days, when the floods came, they usually brought about the changing of the emperor as well because it was said to be a sign that the emperor had lost the mandate of heaven. When the levee breaks on the main damn in a few years...lets hope it brings about the change of leadership in Beijing.
As for their decision being based on wisdom.....I highly doubt it. I think it probably has more to do with the communist idea of doing everything on a grand scale. This whole project is nothing more than a scam to show how great socialism/communism is (not).
read later
BTTT!!!!!!!
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