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Protests by former Chinese soldiers: another source of political
instability
By John Chan
1 November 2007
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A series of riots by demobilised Peoples Liberation Army (PLA)
soldiers and associated farming units in September is another
sign of deepening social tensions within Chinese society.
The Hong Kong-based Information Centre for Human Rights and
Democracy reported that on September 3, about 2,000 former troops
at railway training centres in three separate citiesBaotou
(Inner Mongolia), Wuhan (Hubei Province) and Baoji (Shaanxi Province)staged
coordinated demonstrations that turned into riots.
In July, the railway ministry recruited 6,000 former PLA troops
and placed them into 12 railway schools for two years of training.
However, when the soldiers arrived at the schools on August 30,
anger erupted over the run-down dormitories, expensive food and
lack of study materials. There were no power outlets in the dormitories.
Students had to pay to recharge their mobile phones.
The former troops in different schools some 1,250 kilometres
apart probably held discussions via mobile phone and the Internet.
Their coordinated protests included smashing classrooms, overturning
cars and damaging statues at the schools. Hundreds of police were
sent to the three locations to suppress the demonstrations, resulting
in clashes in which 20 people were injured and five arrested.
The Associated Press noted: Reports posted on the Internet
along with video clips appearing to show some of the violence
said the disturbances were even more widespread, but gave few
details. Classes were suspended and police moved in to patrol
the schools.
The railway ministry issued an emergency order expelling all
6,000 former soldiers without any alternative job offers. The
decision provoked further anger.
On September 13, 1,000 former PLA troops at a railway school
in Qiqihar city (northeastern Heilongjiang Province) staged a
demonstration and smashed windows at the schools main building.
Clashes erupted after hundreds of police were sent to suppress
the protest. More former soldiers arrived from other areas after
rumours spread that two students had been killed. In all, 10 people
were injured, five arrested and three police cars destroyed.
The underlying cause of the protests is the fact that Beijing
is incapable of providing decent jobs for hundreds of thousands
of demobilised PLA troops. Wu Zhanqun, a former soldier in Qiqihar,
told the Hong Kong-based Ming Pao newspaper that the authorities
treated those from rural backgrounds particularly badly. They
were only paid 10,000-20,000 yuan ($US1,330-$2,660) as a demobilisation
payout and received no support or training, making it hard to
find a job.
While protests by ex-soldiers are still rare, collective petitions
have become increasingly frequent. In April 2005, for instance,
1,600 demobilised troops from 20 provinces organised a sit-in
strike in front of the PLA General Political Department in Beijing.
The authorities used police to disperse them. The same police-state
measures are being used against laid off workers from state-owned
industries or farmers protesting against being expelled from their
land by real estate developers.
Ten days after the demonstrations at the railway schools, several
thousand cotton workers belonging to the Construction and Production
Corps, a paramilitary organisation in Xinjiang region, also staged
a protest in the Suxingtan area. The Construction and Production
Corps was established in this predominantly Muslim Central Asian
province in the 1950s to employ demobilised soldiers in farming
and other economic activities. The settlement strategy was aimed
at strengthening the central governments control in this
remote and restive area. With market reform, however,
most of these work regiments have been dissolved or have evolved
into business operations over the past two decades.
According to the Hong Kong Information Centre of Democracy
and Human Rights, the protest involved workers from the 127th
and 123rd regiments of the Seventh Agricultural Division. The
two units have 15,000 employees, mainly involved in cotton growing.
Cotton production has been outsourced to individual workers, who
are responsible for all the input costs. At the same time, however,
the workers are barred from selling the cotton, which is still
collected by the military at fixed prices.
This year the division paid cotton growers just 9 yuan per
kilogram, well below the market price of 13.4 yuan and not enough
to even cover production costs. In response to attempts by cotton
growers to sell privately, the military set up checkpoints to
prevent smuggling.
At midnight on September 22, the Seventh Agricultural Division
sent out 100 police to raid workers homes and forcibly collect
hidden cotton. Clashes erupted in which 30 people were injured,
mainly women and the elderly. The next morning, several thousand
workers stormed local checkpoints and smashed a police station.
Hundreds of police were send to suppress the protests. At least
25 people were arrested.
A local woman, Cheng, told the South China Morning Post
that the army was responsible for the revolt. The main problem
is that the purchase price is set too low, while the costs of
growing cottons are getting too high. The farmers cannot put up
with it anymore, she said. Cheng also complained that the
military had failed to pay on time and described the official
in charge of the farm as ill-tempered and impatient.
Cotton growers sent representatives to Urumqi, the provincial
capital, to press their case.
The protests by former soldiers and military-related employees
points to the deepening isolation of the Beijing regime. The Stalinist
Communist Party led by Mao Zedong came to power in 1949 not through
a movement of the working class, but by the occupation of the
cities with the peasant-based PLA. In a backward agrarian society
with a bureaucratically regulated economy, the Maoist regime rested
heavily on a large military, drawn mainly from rural areas.
Military conscription for every person over 18 is still officially
in force. But the PLA has been able to fill out its ranks with
volunteers seeking to escape poverty. For rural youth,
the army has been one of the few stepping-stones to a decent education,
a guaranteed job in state industry and even a foot into the privileged
state bureaucracy. But with market reform and Chinas emergence
as a regional power, the role of the PLA has also changed.
Deng Xiaoping overturned Maos military doctrine of Peoples
War, based on large numbers of poorly-trained peasant foot
soldiers, and called for the PLAs modernisation. Between
1985 and 1987, he axed one million soldiers. Amid the widening
social divisions produced by market reforms, the CCP leadership
became increasingly concerned about the loyalty of PLA troops.
To carry out the brutal crackdown on the Tiananmen Square demonstrations
in 1989, the PLA had to bring in units from remote provinces as
those garrisoned in Beijing had displayed sympathy for the demands
of protesting workers and students.
In 1990s, Beijing began to shift the role of domestic repression
from the PLA to a vastly expanded paramilitary Peoples Armed Police,
which now has 1.1 million personnel. At the same time, the army
has been massively downsized. In 1997, the PLA cut half a million
troops. Another 200,000 were axed between 2003 and 2005. From
4.5 million in the early 1980s, the PLAs numbers have been
reduced to 2.3 million. At the same time, however, due to the
extensive restructuring of state-owned enterprises, the PLA can
no longer guarantee a job to demobilised soldiers.
The character of the PLA is also changing. Shocked by the US
militarys rapid annihilation of the Iraqi army in the 1990-91
Gulf War, Beijing also began to refashion the PLA as a more professional
and hi-tech military force. Poorly-educated peasant conscripts
are not the most suitable personnel for precision-guided bombs,
supersonic fighter jets or a blue-water fleet. In recent years,
the PLA has sought more highly-educated recruits, taking advantage
of the growing pool of unemployed university graduates.
The eruption of protests among demobilised soldiers is a sharp
indication of deep discontent among the CCPs traditional
rural base. Over the past three decades, the unfettered operation
of market forces has created deep social division in rural communities
between the wealthy few and the rural poor who number in the hundreds
of millions. These tensions must now be reflected inside the PLA
itself, which, far from being a secure bastion of support for
the regime, is becoming another source of instability.
See Also:
China's Communist Party congress:
a celebration of private wealth and market success
[26 October 2007]
Chinese government imposes
nationwide military training for students
[10 May 2007]
Beijing's new moral
model: from peasant soldier to middle class consumer
[30 March 2006]
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