A Chinese farmer is fighting off property developers who want his land, firing rockets from a homemade cannon made out of a wheelbarrow and pipes. Yang Youde, who lives on the outskirts of the bustling city of Wuhan, in central Hubei province, said he had fended off two eviction attempts with his improvised weapon, which uses ammunition made from locally sold fireworks.
"I shot only over their heads to frighten them," he told the China Daily of his attacks on demolition workers sent to move him off his land. "I didn't want to cause any injuries."
The rockets, which can travel over 100 yards, exploded with a deafening bang, the official paper added. It did not say if anyone had been injured. His approach is more aggressive than most, but Mr Yang's problem is a common one.
Anger over property confiscation is one of the leading causes of unrest in China, with many people forced to give up homes and land to make way for anything from roads to luxury villas.
Mr Yang said the local government had offered him 130,000 yuan (£13,000) for his fields, on which they want to erect "department buildings". He said the land is worth five times that amount.
Construction ditches have already been dug across the land of less obstinate neighbours. A first eviction team attacked Mr Yang in February after his rockets ran out, but local police came to his rescue. In May he held off 100 people by firing from a makeshift watchtower.
2 comments:
great posts today..this one in particular..this is all too common in China..graft and corruption greases the skids..local officials paid to look the other way..you'll notice the highrise buildings in the background of the top photo..I was reading yesterday of cracks showing in the Three Gorges Dam..I am not surprised..it was probably substandard concrete which is all to common in China..I've expected that 3 Gorges would encounter trouble..the Chinese love dams too much yet they don't take proper care of them..want some enlightenment? read about Banqiao Dam disaster.. <span>approximately 26,000 people died from flooding and another 145,000 died during subsequent epidemics and famine. In addition, about 5,960,000 buildings collapsed, and 11 million residents were affected</span>
I'm actually surprised he was offered anything at all for his land. Doesn't everything technically belong to the government?
Post a Comment