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  • 10
    Feb
    2012
    6:47am, EST

    Nguyen Hung / VnExpress via AP

    Nguyen Thi Thuong stands by the ruins of her house in Tien Lang District, northern Vietnam, on Feb. 4, 2012. On Jan. 5, Thuong returned home from dropping her kids off at school to find a mob of armed police in riot gear surrounding her farm house.

    Farmer hailed as hero in Vietnam after shooting cops

    The Associated Press reports from HANOI, Vietnam — When local police arrived in riot gear to evict the Vuon clan, family members were ready with homemade land mines and improvised shotguns. In a guerrilla-style ambush reminiscent of a Vietnam War battle, they wounded six officers.

    But instead of drawing public condemnation, last month's rare violence by fish farmers trying to hold onto leased land in the northern port city of Hai Phong has made a national hero of family ringleader Doan Van Vuon and ripped open a debate about heavy-handed seizures by local governments.

    Many Vietnamese see Vuon as a symbol of the country's millions of farmers, many of whom are fed up with losing property or anxious about how new land rights laws will affect them as the government debates 20-year land grants that are due to expire next year. Read the full story.

    50 comments

    whats this world coming to? I just don't know anymore. I lost faith in centralized government, the executive branches of government which includes all the police forces in all the levels of government. I lost faith in the American dream. I have lost faith in people. When will we start parenting ours …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: asia, shootout, protest, farmer, vietnam, land-rights, doan-van-vuon
  • 1
    Feb
    2012
    9:49am, EST

    China rebel village takes halting democratic step

    Bobby Yip / Reuters

    A villager, 2nd right, checks with an election worker beside a ballot box at a school turned into a polling station in Wukan village in Lufeng, Guangdong province, China, on Feb. 1, 2012.

    Reuters reports from WUKAN, China: 

    Residents of a restive village in southern China held a symbolic election on Wednesday in what is being seen as a small step towards grassroots rights.

    The rebellion last year against abuse of power and the illegal sale of hundreds of hectares of farmland in coastal Wukan have become a benchmark of rural defiance against land grabs and corruption that blight villages nation-wide.

    Bobby Yip / Reuters

    An election worker, left, looks out from inside a classroom guarded by police officers during vote counting at a school turned into a polling station in Wukan on Feb. 1, 2012.

    More than 6,000 villagers streamed into a school amid brilliant sunshine, with turnout well over 80 percent.

    "This far exceeded our expectations," said Yang Semao, a village elder who helped officiate. "It shows our passion for democracy." Read the full story.

    Bobby Yip / Reuters

    Villagers voting in Wukan on Feb. 1, 2012.

    Related content: 

    • A contagion of conflict in China?
    • Villagers defiant as government creates new narrative
    • Chinese villagers defy government in standoff over land rights
    • Rebellious Chinese village under siege by police

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    2 comments

    I think we are seeing the very first part of what China has brought on it's self, in that they let to many of their people have an education. You can talk about freedom and shairing the fruits of their labors but when you have only a few who can have it then the rest will want it to. Power to the pe …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, asia, election, democracy, world-news, rural, land-rights, wukan
  • 15
    Dec
    2011
    12:14pm, EST

    Chinese villagers defy government in standoff over land rights

    Peter Parks / AFP - Getty Images

    Residents of Wukan, a fishing village in the southern province of Guangdong, rally to demand the government take action over illegal land grabs and the death in custody of a local leader on Dec. 15, 2011.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Residents prepare for the funeral of Xue Jinbo, a local leader who died in police custody, in Wukan on Dec. 15, 2011.

    Reuters reports from BEIJING:

     Villagers in southern China on Thursday defied authorities and continued protests over a death in custody and land dispute in the latest outburst of simmering rural discontent that is eroding the ruling Communist Party's grip at the grassroots.

    Many hundreds of residents in Wukan Village in Guangdong province held an angry march and rally despite moves by authorities to halt a land project at the center of the months-long unrest and detain local officials involved.

    "The whole village is distraught and enraged. We want the central government to come in and restore justice," said one resident who described the scene.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Residents of Wukan march to demand the government take action over illegal land grabs and Xue Jinbo's death on Dec. 15, 2011.

    He and another resident, both speaking on condition of anonymity, said villagers remain enraged over last weekend's death in custody of Xue Jinbo, 42, who was detained on suspicion of helping organize protests against land seizures.

    "We won't be satisfied until there is a full investigation and redress for Xue Jinbo's death," said the second resident.

    "If you say he wasn't beaten to death, then you can show us the body," another villager who had his face hidden from the camera by the hood of his jacket told Hong Kong's Cable TV.

    "If there really isn't any injury on the body, then why would you not return the body to us?" Continue reading.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Residents of Wukan take part in a rally on Dec. 15, 2011.

    Read more in a Behind the Wall blog post by Ed Flanagan of NBC News: Rebellious Chinese village under siege by police

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    2 comments

    I WISH THE VILLAGERS ALL THE BEST OF LUCK!Hang in There! Justice will triumph in the end no matter how long it takes EVIL sooner or later WILL BE GROUND INTO THE DIRT!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, asia, protest, world-news, rural, land-rights, wukan, xue-jinbo

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