Despite Government Repression, Hundreds Protest China Chemical Plant 4th May

chinachemplant

chinachemplant

Hun­dreds of peo­ple have protest­ed against a pro­posed chem­i­cal plant in south­west Chi­na, state media said, while res­i­dents in anoth­er city accused author­i­ties of pre­vent­ing a sim­i­lar protest.

More than 200 demon­stra­tors gath­ered in the city of Kun­ming on Sat­ur­day to protest plans for a fac­to­ry which will pro­duce paraxy­lene (PX), a tox­ic petro­chem­i­cal used to make fab­rics, China’s offi­cial Xin­hua news agency report­ed.

About 1,000 peo­ple described as “onlook­ers” sur­round­ed the pro­test­ers, some of whom wore face-masks and held ban­ners, the report said, adding that police “dis­suad­ed” a pro­test­er from dis­play­ing a ban­ner.

Police also lined the streets of Cheng­du, the cap­i­tal of south­west China’s Sichuan province, after locals planned to demon­strate over a near­by chem­i­cal plant, res­i­dents said.

“There were a lot of police out­side gov­ern­ment offices, pub­lic spaces and impor­tant cross­roads in the city,” one res­i­dent sur­named Liu said, adding that fliers post­ed around the city in recent days had called for a protest.

“The fliers said the chem­i­cal plant has a big impact on people’s health,” he said, not want­i­ng to give a full name for fear of offi­cial reprisals. The gov­ern­ment respond­ed with notices call­ing on peo­ple not to demon­strate, Liu said.

 

Pho­tos post­ed online showed ranks of police lin­ing the city’s streets. Local police on Sat­ur­day morn­ing announced that they would be car­ry­ing out an earth­quake pro­tec­tion drill, a claim dis­missed by thou­sands of inter­net users.

“It’s about pre­vent­ing the protest,” one user of the pop­u­lar social net­work­ing web­site Sina Wei­bo wrote in response to the police notice. “This is the most bla­tant lie in the his­to­ry of Cheng­du,” added anoth­er.

Locals online said that the protest did not take place. Cheng­du was shak­en last month by a 6.6 mag­ni­tude earth­quake which struck Lushan coun­ty, about 160km away, killing about 200 peo­ple.

Schools and uni­ver­si­ties in the city were request­ed to hold extra class­es on Sat­ur­day, in an appar­ent attempt to keep peo­ple from protest­ing, sev­er­al online reports said.

Ris­ing trend

ChinaChemProtest2

Chi­na has seen a num­ber of urban demon­stra­tions against pro­posed chem­i­cal plants in recent years, in what ana­lysts have iden­ti­fied as a ris­ing trend of envi­ron­men­tal­ly-moti­vat­ed “not in my back­yard” protests in Chi­na.

Local author­i­ties in the coastal city of Xia­men can­celled plans for a PX plant after thou­sands took part in a protest in 2007.

A huge protest in the north­east­ern city of Dalian in 2011 prompt­ed author­i­ties to announce a sim­i­lar climb­down.

The east­ern city of Ning­bo last year announced the with­draw­al of plans for a PX plant after a demon­stra­tion involv­ing about 200 peo­ple, while a vio­lent protest in the south­west­ern city of Shi­fang prompt­ed offi­cials to shelve pro­pos­als for a met­als fac­to­ry.

Search­es for “Cheng­du PX” were blocked on Sina Wei­bo on Sat­ur­day, while posts about the Kun­ming protest were delet­ed by online cen­sors.