Protesters in East China Clash with Police Over Waste Incinerator Plan

Photo: Caixin10th May 2014  Pro­test­ers in east­ern Chi­na clashed with police at a ral­ly against plans to build a huge waste incin­er­a­tor that res­i­dents fear will be harm­ful to their health and add to pol­lu­tion.

Photo: Caixin10th May 2014  Pro­test­ers in east­ern Chi­na clashed with police at a ral­ly against plans to build a huge waste incin­er­a­tor that res­i­dents fear will be harm­ful to their health and add to pol­lu­tion.

Chok­ing smog blan­kets many Chi­nese cities and the envi­ron­men­tal degra­da­tion result­ing from the country’s break­neck eco­nom­ic growth is anger­ing its increas­ing­ly well-edu­cat­ed and afflu­ent pop­u­la­tion.

Two of the pro­test­ers told Reuters that the demon­stra­tions, which have last­ed for more than two weeks, turned vio­lent with hun­dreds of police descend­ing onto the streets of Yuhang, close to the tourist city of Hangzhou.

“There have cer­tain­ly been injuries,” one of the pro­test­ers, Wu Yun­feng, said by tele­phone. “The police have closed down the roads into Yuhang and locked the site down.”

 

Anoth­er pro­test­er, who declined to give her name, said sev­er­al police cars had been over­turned.

A police offi­cer, reached by tele­phone, said the demon­stra­tion had already end­ed. He declined to pro­vide fur­ther details.

Reuters was unable to reach the local gov­ern­ment for com­ment.

On Fri­day, the offi­cial Hangzhou Dai­ly news­pa­per defend­ed the con­struc­tion of the incin­er­a­tor, say­ing the tech­nol­o­gy it would use was safe and up to stan­dard.

Hangzhou, cap­i­tal of pros­per­ous Zhe­jiang province and best known in Chi­na as the site of a famous lake, has seen its lus­tre dimmed in recent years by a recur­rent smog prob­lem.

Pic­tures on China’s Twit­ter-like Wei­bo site showed police fight­ing with pro­test­ers and at least two pro­test­ers with blood stream­ing down their faces.

Anoth­er pic­ture showed sev­er­al hun­dred peo­ple sur­round­ing a large group of police.

“We don’t want our chil­dren and grand­chil­dren to get can­cer. Give us back our beau­ti­ful home,” read one let­ter of protest car­ried on Wei­bo.

Reuters was not able to inde­pen­dent­ly ver­i­fy the pic­tures’ authen­tic­i­ty.

About 90,000 “mass inci­dents” – a euphemism for protests – occur each year in Chi­na, trig­gered by cor­rup­tion, pol­lu­tion, ille­gal land grabs and oth­er griev­ances.

Late in March, hun­dreds of res­i­dents of the south­ern town of Maom­ing staged protests against plans to build a petro­chem­i­cal plant there, for fear it would con­tribute to pol­lu­tion.