Chinese Man Attempts Suicide Outside Government Headquarters in Beijing


2015.09.17
china-yangshihe-sept172015.jpg Petitioner Yang Shihe lies slumped on the ground after drinking pesticide, Beijing, Sept. 17, 2015.
Photo courtesy of Civil Rights and Livelihood Watch

Police in Beijing on Thursday took away a man who drank pesticide in an apparent suicide bid outside the headquarters of the ruling Chinese Communist Party government close to Tiananmen Square, rights activists said.

Yang Shihe, a petitioner from the northeastern city of Harbin, collapsed on the pavement near the guard-post outside government headquarters in Beijing's Zhongnanhai palace compound after swallowing pesticide, with white foam coming from his mouth, the Hubei-based Civil Rights and Livelihood Watch group said.

"It happened this morning outside the guard-post of Xinhua Gate [the front gate of Zhongnanhai]," the group's founder Liu Feiyue told RFA. "He was discovered by police."

Liu said Yang had pursued a complaint against authorities in his hometown for many years, but to no avail.

"He has a lot of grievances, and I think he just drank pesticide in the heat of the moment," he said. "The police lifted him into a vehicle, and they probably took him to hospital."

"We don't know his situation now," he said.

A photo of the scene shot clandestinely by an eyewitness showed an elderly man on the pavement next to a couple of bottles and some luggage.

Liu's website quoted eyewitnesses as saying that the man was from Mulan county near Harbin in the northeastern province of Heilongjiang, and had drunk the pesticide outside a sentry box on Beijing's Chang'an Boulevard at around 8.00 a.m. local time.

However, repeated calls to one of the eyewitnesses quoted in the story resulted in a switched-off message.

Frequent attempts


Attempted suicides are growing increasingly common among disgruntled petitioners, many of whom are forced evictees, and most of whom pursue complaints against local officials for years or even decades with no result.

Petitioners, who flood China's official complaints departments with more than 20,000 complaints daily across the country, frequently report being held in "black jails," beaten, or otherwise harassed,if they persist in a complaint beyond its initial rejection at a local level.

According to Liu, the sheer emotional strain of petitioning takes a heavy toll on some.

"If they weren't in a state where they really couldn't take it any more, they wouldn't commit suicide," Liu said. "High suicide rates among petitioners tell us that their grievances aren't being effectively handled."

Petitioning in China has a long history, and is officially regarded as a legal and legitimate activity, but petitioners are often targeted by local officials keen to avoid bad publicity.

"Not only are their issues not dealt with, but they are themselves subjected to further persecution, such as being locked up in black jails, [and subjected to] criminal detention, jail sentences, and incarceration in mental health institutions," Liu said.

End of the line

According to fellow Harbin petitioner Ma Bo, a lot of those attempting suicide do so in Beijing, where they feel they have exhausted all channels of complaint and have reached the end of the line.

"Earlier this year, we had a group of more than 30 drink pesticide on Wangfujing," Ma said, referring to one of Beijing's busiest shopping districts.

"I heard that some of them died, but I don't know how many, and it was only a rumor."

He said the numbers of petitioners being detained in the capital in large-scale detention centers like Majialou appear to be on the rise.

"These people feel total despair, so they try to use their deaths as a form of protest," Ma said.

Wuxi petitioner Ding Hongfen agreed.

"Ordinary people get to the stage of wanting to kill themselves because they are all victims," Ding said. "They have been subjected to every kind of persecution under an authoritarian power."

"The Chinese government, and the local governments in particular, should think about that."

Reported by Qiao Long for RFA's Mandarin Service. Translated and written in English by Luisetta Mudie.

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