AFP: Hundreds of police storm 'AIDS village' in China, arrest 13 farmers
July 3, 2003 (Clearwisdom.net) BEIJING, July 3 (AFP) - Hundreds of police officers
and hired thugs stormed an "AIDS village" in central China last month,
smashing TVs and windows, indiscriminately beating up residents and arresting 13
farmers, villagers said Thursday. The incident, which happened at 11:00 pm on June 22, is the most extreme
known case of a police crackdown on farmers in central China's Henan province
who are devastated by an AIDS outbreak and are demanding more government help. The raid on Xiongqiao village highlights the government's problem in dealing
with a scandal involving HIV-tainted blood. Up to a million farmers are believed
to have contracted the HIV virus after selling blood in unsanitary
government-approved blood stations in the mid-1980s to mid-1990s, devastating
whole villages. About 700 of the 3,000 residents in Xiongqiao have been
diagnosed as HIV positive, and 400 of them have developed AIDS, villagers said. Police officials in Shangcai county, Wulong township, where Xiongqiao village
is located, confirmed 13 farmers were detained and that three others arrested
separately were also being held. They said the villagers were arrested for
robbery and because they had attacked government offices -- including the
township government office, police station and the county's communist party
office. They did not say what the villagers were meant to have stolen. "Their actions constitute a violation of laws. They will be charged with
robbery and attacking state offices," said an official in the Shangcai
county police station's criminal division. Police also confirmed
"many" officers went to the village that night, but did not offer
details. Relatives and several farmers in the village, still sounding shaken by the
incident, told AFP 500 to 600 uniformed officers, said to be anti-riot police,
and plain-clothes men, believed to be hired thugs, raided the village that
night. "They turned off the electricity and cut the telephone lines. ... They
smashed windows and broke televisions," said a man whose mother-in-law was
in hospital after being hit in the upper arm. "They broke down doors and
started beating people with clubs, not caring who they were hitting. They even
hit children," said a woman from the village who declined to be identified. "Some farmers ran. Some farmers just wanted to know what was going on
and they were beaten too," said another farmer from a neighboring village.
Farmers gave varying reasons on why the police took such strong actions. One
woman said farmers had repeatedly gone to government offices in groups to
complain because local officials had not issued monthly government subsidies of
about 200 yuan (24 US dollars) for AIDS patients to buy medicine. Some farmers
also refused to turn over portions of their harvest as required. Others believed
the raid happened because farmers angered by county officials demanding a share
of their harvest got into a scuffle with the officials earlier in the month and
overturned their vehicle. Police arrested three farmers that day. Despite the central government finally admitting to the blood-selling AIDS
scandal in 2001, after initial silence, the incidents indicate farmers remain in
a desperate situation, unable to pay for effective medicine while supporting
their families. The county police official said the arrested farmers, some
believed to be AIDS sufferers, face sentences of three to five years jail. He
accused farmers of being "bullies". "They beat up the Wulong
township's police station director and deputy township director and the local
family planning director," he said. Farmers said the arrests were broadcast on the county television station.
"This was done to suppress farmers," a man who has HIV said.
"They're using these farmers to send a message to other AIDS sufferers to
not cause any trouble otherwise the same can happen to them." According to UN estimates, up to 1.5 million people in China had HIV by
December 2001, and the number could reach 10 million by 2010. http://www.ptd.net/webnews/wed/bd/Qchina-health-aids.R0jX_Dl3.html
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