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Bootleg deaths spark village rioting in Hunan
By Edward Cody (Washingtonpost.com)
Updated: 2005-12-05 10:32

It was well past midnight when the peasants finished piling up fragrant tobacco leaves, more than 1,000 pounds of them stacked 10 feet high on the back of a rented truck. In the still darkness, they pulled slowly out of Shangdeng village, bumped along a dirt road for a few miles and then, the engine whining, turned onto the paved highway and picked up speed.


Deng Suilong, the older brother of Deng Silong, one of the two slain men, was part of the crowd that stormed Yantang city hall in protest. [The Washington Post]
The smugglers had about $750 worth of the prized tobacco that peasants here in southern Hunan province call their "golden leaves." They were on their way to a predawn rendezvous with underground buyers, who would pay a 30 percent premium to get their hands on tobacco outside the official monopoly that is strictly enforced by the Chinese government.

The peasants of Shangdeng, who cultivate the soft slopes 200 miles south of Changsha, the provincial capital, were not making the run down China's Thunder Road for the first time. Tobacco smuggling has become a tradition here. But in the early morning of Aug. 30, it went quickly and tragically wrong.

Someone -- a spy, villagers said -- had tipped off the local anti-smuggling squad. About 20 policemen and Communist Party and government officials from nearby Yantang town lay in ambush only a mile down the highway. According to an official account, the bootleg tobacco was seized according to law. But in the process, the account acknowledged, two of the smugglers, Deng Jianlan, 33, and Deng Silong, 38, ended up dead, their badly damaged bodies left beside the road.

Local officials described the deaths as a pair of freak accidents. But the villagers of Shangdeng said they were convinced the two men were killed deliberately by members of the anti-smuggling squad who were carrying iron bars. Outraged b y the news, relatives, friends and fellow smugglers gathered shortly after dawn in front of Yantang city hall, demanding an explanation from municipal authorities with jurisdiction over local villages.

The white-tiled building was padlocked tight and nobody came out to face the crowd, recalled Deng Suilong, 54, Deng Silong's older brother. The number of protesters swelled quickly to several hundred, he said, which meant that most of the men from among Shangdeng's 1,000 residents were on hand and angry. "They were all yelling and screaming," said one of the men present, who declined to provide his name for fear of prosecution.

Their rage growing, the peasants broke down the door to city hall and burst inside, witnesses said. They rushed up to the main offices on the second floor, and some of them began sacking everything in sight. The building's blue-tinted windows were shattered on several of the five stories, the witnesses said, and tables, chairs and desks were broken into pieces.

When the Yantang Communist Party secretary, Liu Tangxiong, showed up with several other officials to try and calm the mob, a local official said, the peasants knocked his front teeth out and continued their rampage unhindered until it was time to go home for a late breakfast.

The violence in Yantang, although small in scale, was part of what officials say is a growing trend of assaults against police, officials and government property in China. The Public Security Ministry estimates that more than 1,800 policemen were attacked in the line of duty in the first six months of this year, sharply up from previous years. A ministry spokesman, Wu Heping, was quoted by the official party organ, the People's Daily, as saying that 23 policemen were killed in a broad range of clashes with "criminal suspects or people intending to interfere with law enforcement through violence."
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