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Four Chinese protesters cut off and
swallow fingertips
AFP , BEIJING
Friday, Aug 06, 2010, Page 1
Four protesters in Beijing cut off their fingertips and
swallowed them in a desperate bid to bring attention to their cause, state media
reported yesterday.
The men, from Hunan Province, traveled to the capital to seek resolution of a
dispute with their former employer, who they said fired them on trumped-up
charges, the official Global Times newspaper said.
They gathered at Tsinghua University, one of the nationˇ¦s most highly regarded,
on Sunday and rested their hands on books on the pavement, the report said.
Then, in front of hundreds of bystanders, each in turn held a cleaver and
brought it down, cutting the tops off their little fingers and swallowing the
severed tips, it said.
ˇ§I felt so calm doing that, as we have been driven from pillar to post,ˇ¨ Li Bo,
one of the men, was quoted as saying.
The four have since been seized by police and forced out of Beijing, the report
said.
The case highlights the desperate measures some people in China will take to
bring attention to grievances that have been ignored by local governments or
courts.
Over the past year, some protesters have even set themselves on fire and died to
prevent their houses or businesses from being demolished, in cases that have
shocked the nation.
Li said the electric power bureau in Hunanˇ¦s Yongzhou City fired the four in
December 2008 on charges of absenteeism, which he said were wrong.
They tried to have their case heard at the cityˇ¦s committee for labor disputes,
which rebuffed them, saying they had never worked for the electricity bureau.
Last month, they filed a lawsuit against their former employer, but a court in
Hunan rejected it, the report said.
Li alleged that the four had also received death threats from local government
officials in Hunan, and after all legal avenues were exhausted, they decided to
travel to Beijing as a last resort, it said.
Under a system dating from imperial times, Chinese people can petition
government authorities in Beijing over injustices or unresolved disputes.
However, many such petitioners complain of official unresponsiveness to their
concerns, while others report being detained by authorities and kicked out of
the capital to be sent home.
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