The New York Times
March 19, 2002
‘The scale of unrest is extraordinary for any country in peacetime, with an average of 240 incidents each day.’
(excerpt)
Beijing: Chinese took to the streets to protest land seizures, corruption, pollution and unpaid wages in record numbers in 2005, the national police said Thursday, with mass incidents that involved violent confrontations or attacks on government property surging at the fastest rate. The number of “public order disturbances” rose 6.6 percent last year, to 87,000. Mass protests that involved “disturbing social order” jumped 13 percent, while those that “interfered with government functions” surged 19 percent, the Public Security Bureau, the national police, told Chinese reporters at a news conference on Thursday that was reported by the New China News Agency. Although the mounting social disorder has not slowed China’s economy, which continues to power ahead at nearly a double-digit clip, it does present a major challenge to the Communist Party, which has struggled to resolve the grievances of those left behind in the long boom. Peasants, migrant workers and former employees of bankrupt state-run factories in the cities – collectively the overwhelming majority of China’s 1.3 billion people – have tended to benefit far less from the prosperity than the budding urban middle class and the party elite.
Categories: Rule of Law, Three Gorges Probe


