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Battling against a Beijing demolition

Posted: Friday, November 07, 2008 1:48 PM
Filed Under:

BEIJING – According to the lunar calendar, it's officially winter in China today. And although it was sunny, the wind picked up as the temperature dropped.

So spare a thought for 56-year-old Dong Jiqin, who could be evicted from his home in western Beijing and sleeping on the streets of the capital tonight.

Not because he's just another victim of the global economic recession. If anything, he's just the latest casualty of China's breakneck development.

Or so it would appear.

Adrienne Mong / NBC News
Dong Jiqin holds up a court document.

"The demolition project here began in October 2002," he told us and a handful of other foreign journalists shivering in the morning chill of his dilapidated courtyard home in Beijing’s Xicheng district. "Neither the government nor the developer has ever shown any certificate of legitimate right to tear down houses [here]."

Dong, who was grasping a folder of legal documents that included court summonses and court notices regarding the demolition of his home, said he had been given no information about the development plan.

"Nobody ever came to my house to discuss details. They are just trying to take my house illegally," he said calmly. "They bought off the garbage collector, too. He told me they are coming to demolish today."

Activist targeted
Dong was born in this courtyard house. It's where he played and grew up, where he lived when he got married, and where he raised his daughter.

It's also where his wife, Ni Yulan, was taken by plainclothes police – and, her husband believes, gangsters – on April 15 of this year. "They came to our house, tore down some of the house, cut off our phone and power lines, grabbed our belongings and dug up our sewage pipes," recalled Dong.

The authorities initially accused Ni of assaulting a demolition worker, part of a group tearing down homes surrounding Dong and Ni’s house in the Qianzheng hutong (the term for the series of narrow streets and alleys that characterize traditional Beijing neighborhoods).

Gu Bo / NBC News
Dong Jiqin's wife has been held by the authorities since April.

A couple of weeks later, Ni was charged with obstructing a public official, which according to China’s Criminal Law carries a maximum sentence of three years in prison.

Ni – a lawyer by training – was not just a pesky homeowner who refused to vacate her house. She had been an active voice campaigning on behalf of residents who had experienced similar situations – forced evictions and the destruction of their homes around Beijing during the city’s makeover ahead of the Summer Olympics.

She lost her lawyer’s license when she was arrested in 2002 and sentenced to a year in prison after filming the demolition of the house of someone who was forced out of their home. According to Human Rights Watch, she was beaten while being held by the police for 75 days.

It’s her activism for tenants’ rights that Dong believes is the reason his family is being persecuted and driven out of their home.

Ni was supposed to stand trial in August, just before the Olympics began, but it was postponed. No new date has been set, and no further information has been given, said her husband.

Spotlight on China
But Ni’s case may get some international attention soon. "It will be interesting to see how Ni’s case might be affected in light of the [United Nations] Committee Against Torture review of China," said Sophie Richardson, the Asia advocacy director at Human Rights Watch.

The U.N. Convention Against Torture – which comprises ten independent experts who monitor the implementation of the international convention – is starting a very public two-day review of China in Geneva on Friday. As a member of the U.N., the Chinese government has had no choice but to agree to the scrutiny and answer questions about alleged abuses against prisoners and dissidents.

While it’s hard to gauge what impact the review might have on officials in Beijing, "this has never happened before," said Richardson.

The Chinese government has prepared for another review scheduled early next year by the U.N. on broader human rights. Earlier this week, it announced what it called a "human rights action plan," the first of its kind in the country, designed to protect citizens’ rights over the next two years.

Seeking answers…and justice 
But none of this has come soon enough for Dong, who last saw his wife 215 days ago.

"I have not seen her at all since she was taken," he said although his lawyer has been allowed to visit her three times. "She was in a single room for a long time. She has a chronic headache, but they don’t give her any treatment or medicine."

Dong, a former education administrator who has since stopped working, said he has filed appeals with the local district court to stop the demolition. His wife has written letters alleging police brutality while she’s in custody. And Dong says that their 24-year-old daughter, who had been living at home, has been so spooked by some of the apparent intimidation tactics that she has run away.

Dong said they don’t have any real options – apart from talking to the media in the hope someone can help him.

Of the thirteen people in his family who used to live in the traditional courtyard house, he is the last one holding out in this Qianzheng hutong.

"I have nowhere to go if I am evicted," he said quietly. "I’ll have to become a homeless person. We have no prospect if corruption is not investigated."

When I called him this evening to check on his status, he said no one had yet come for him. But he wasn’t hopeful.

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Comments

Hmmm....what was it that our president -elect said about China? Nothing but admiration for what they had built in such a short period of time. And that he could understand why corporations would want to be based in China. America beware.
That just goes to show  that The USA is not the only place needing drastic change. If they had the right to bear arms? due process?
Then there is the FBI report that it appears China was hacking into the McCain and Obama websites to gather information on their policy leanings with regard to China. Therefore I would not be surprised if Chinese money in the tens of millions were used to send to chinese partisans in this country to send to the Obama campaign after they decided his and not McCains policies favored their government.  Obama campaign has never explained where all that $100,000,000 at the end of theri campaign came from.
I feel very sad for these people and for China.  China has such great potential, with it's history, culture and human resources to be a good force in this world.   It must first be a good force for it's own most humble people if it is to take on the mantle of a world leader.  The leadership of China must find a way to protect it's poorest citizens, otherwise it will not stay in power for very long.  They must find the wisdom to deliver real enforceable property rights for their citizens.  
no country should be allowed to be a member of the united nations if they continue to abuse, torture and falsely imprison thier citizens.when the chinese government violates the rights of their own people with such attrocities, it is the united nations responsibilty to step in and sanction them into compliance. their treatment of their people is inexcusable and something must be done...now
The Olympics are over, so why are the Chinese Gov still trying to oust people from their homes, what they should be doing is help these people by redeveloping their homes, not trying to throw them out and leave them desolate, i really can't believe that in this day an age that this is still happening throughout the  world and not just China.
The UN is a joke.
I came back from a visit in China two weeks ago, and while I was visiting a similar neighborhood in Xi'an, I could hear a message being played over and over again on a loudspeaker in the streets.  I asked our tour guide what they were saying on the loudspeaker and she said it was the government "persuading" the people there to move so they could demolish the houses and build large apartment buildings to beautify the city.  I don't know about you, but I think "persuade" is an awfully gentle term for a message that is played over and over again, very loud, day and night in this community.  A more appropriate term would be "torture."
chinese authorities sicken me.
And the lying, cheating, immoral, communist regime of the governing body of crooked China continues on its path of repression of its peoples and the manufacturing of lying evidence to achieve its goals.
That being to scr-w over any and all Chinese citizens who dare say or to get in its way of communist nation building.
What a despicable government.
China not only lies to the rest of the world on a  regular basis, but has the rest of the world so scared of its murdering government that the OIC won't even call them on the lies about their gymnastic female athletes.
Doesn't matter though, the Olympics will never ever be held in their stinking nation again.
The only thing the Chinese government does on a regular basis, and something the rest of the world can count on, is for China to continue lying to the rest of the world about anything and everything.
Now people should begin to understand why our constituiton allows us to keep and bare arms." To protect the populace from our own government" These poor people have no hope in fairness of any kind from their own government. Isn't communism grand? NO recourse, no guns, no way to escape.
LOn
this has been very interesting reading.  I am trying to figure out why this is international news.  there are so many atrocities happening here in our own country, but i guess it's not important if it's not happenong in a foreign country, and someone can make a "cause" out of it.  Has anyone noticed that causes are more important to everyone if you never really have to touch those involved?  Think about it. Try making a difference outside your own front door, maybe the ripples will carry out, and more eople will feel the need to change things.
They don't have First Amendment rights and a Second Amendment to guarantee the First.
We need to boycott items imported from China until China stops its oppression.
Jim, from Orlando.  I can't speak for anyone else, but my grandmother who use to live in one of those hovels, and I have lived in that hovel for 3 years as a child when she was taking care of me.  She was given a new high rise apartment as compensation when they came and torn down her one room, 300 sqft hovel, with no indoor plumbing, heating system, and fire hazard electrical wiring.  Her new apartment had a living room that was bigger than the hovel, and all the modern amenities.  She was extremely happy, so was all her neighbors, who got similar compensation, cept for one.  The one that held out demanded 5 times the compensations of what others got.  I immediately knew who that person was.  He was the neighbor that had no job when the communist China really had 100% employment rate before the "opening up".  Nobody knew exactly what he did for a living.  Despite having no job, he was the first on the block to get a TV set.  All the neighbors wispered that he was shady and underhanded.  anyone who deal with him always end up on the lossing end.  so it was no suprise that he was the last hold out.  The truth is he already was living in a high rise apartment, that nobody knew how he got.  Of course the local police knew all about him, so they put him under arrest and tored his house down while he was in jail.  He got the same compensation as everyone else, but all the neighbors think it was more than what he deserved.  I'm not saying the person in this article is the same, but just that the story is extrmely one sided.  it's totally based on the words of this one person who had a vested interest to appear as a victim.  I don't even see the reporter making an effort to talk to this guy's formal neighbors and check into his true financial situations.  But of course, when you are writting to an audience who have no interest but to affirm their belief in the worst of Chinese government, then you don't really have to fact check or exercise journalistic integrity.
James, did you expect to get anything other than one side?  The chinese government does as it pleases and offers NO explanations.  Rather it simply makes those who complain, disappear to be "re-educated"  But then I have no doubt you voted for "change" as well.
I'm Chinese and I know a thing or two why kind of stories keep happening.

It is definitely true that "in general" the government is trying to give the residents reasonable, and sometimes favorable offers for existing tenants to settle elsewhere.

The problem is that this is only true in "in general" and there are many exceptions. Given how many thousands of such projects are going on, given the lack of constitutional protection of the rights of property owners, given that the government doesn't even consider them "owners", given that the government can define at its will what these tenants really own (as of now, they don't own the land, they are merely given right to use this land for 70 years, starting when? I don't know), given that some officials in the government are indeed bullies (because they have unchecked powers), such things happen.

Both sides can genuinely claim that they are victims. Maybe they are both right from their own perspectives.

The tenants see that their prime location of residence is moved far off the center of the city and see the values changed so dramatically over a few years.

On the other side, the government officials are so "tired" and even afraid of demonstrations - an official can easily lose his post if large demonstration happen in his/her jurisdiction. When they are indeed too "tired" then they get angry. When they get angry, bad things happen.

There is no win-win mindset here. I think the real solution still is for the government side to improve its genuine interests in seeing its people benefit from such development.


The story like this one is everywhere in the World.For China,it's just a normal routine because the Government is so rich of US Dollars.Don't blame the Chinese Government because we are sending them the $$$$.
All countries need to boycott China completely or put high tariffs on ALL of the goods they export to the entire world. The few rich in China are capitalising and exploiting the middle class and poor of their own country. For starters , don't buy anything made in China if at all possible, however I know this seems impossible at this point because it seems like evrything you pick up in a store is made in china but we must try as a country. China has already taken over the USA and other countries finanacially. So whats next?  Open your eyes America or should I say Obamination!
You know with Bush having some 60days left in the WhiteHouse, you'd have thunk that this President's impeachment would have been better for all Americans and the rest of the world in general. Hey, have you ever seen the US making aggressive policy making boycotting Chinese consumer products. We are so dependent on the cheap labor & production of China that, we are slaves to that country and nothing would be done very least said, in fear of alienating China. Given our umitigated gluttony and greed for material goods, the superpower has become inadvertantly a SLAVE OF CHINA. This is such a painful reminder of how the Chinese Olympics came to be....in the displacement of thousands and thousands of their own people who were neither compensated nor relocated to a better land for what they sacrificed
It's stuff and nonsense! Chinese government will distribute a big sum of money before let people vacate, which means people can buy better apartment. This man must want to charge more money from the government.  
I notice that most of the negative opinions expressed here are from people who cannot spell even simple, common English words.  I wonder whether this also correlates with their knowledge of world history as well ?

Human settlements in general, and in the U.S. in particular, are and always have been, in the process of renewal and modernization.  Who could honestly disapprove of the modernization of places like the Gorbals (Glasgow, Scotland,) at one time one of the worst slums in Europe ?  When transferred to modern housing, the former residents used their bath tubs for storing coal.  What precious local community loss exactly was anyone supposed to lament ?
So the 'Spotlight on China' is focusing on one unlucky person and uses that to create an image for the whole country? yeah, that sounds fair. Even a great nation like U.S. has homeless people and unfair lawsuit. Going into a country collecting individual story and exaggerate it 10 times just shows that how bias sometimes the media can be.
china is now suffering due to the revisionist that had smashed the democracy that Mao Zedong had led. we must remember that China has been a good country since the Cultural revolution had it's victory but now since Mao died, his legacy to China had been smashed out.. it's time for them to rebuild their society and start reading again Mao's Red book...
Realize it's for the "good" of all Chinese that the government allows this.  And this woman simply is a "trouble-maker" impeding process.  Our Supreme court has passed similar immanent domain laws recently, which allows corporations such as Walmart to overtake private property with the support of the government.  Wake up folks.  This is the system we're voting for.  All of China's policies-- "spreading the wealth," "affordable housing," and has "universal health care"-- come at expense of personal liberty and life.
The property rights gap between China and the USA is closing fast. I think the Chinese are copying East Coast and California Eminent Domain practices. The big difference here is we get a full day in court and get to whine briefly before losing our property to the gov't. If the Chinese propagandists look at the Kelo Decision and over 10,000 eminent domain abuse cases right here in the 'good old USA' (source: Inst. of Justice) - this will give them a more level playing field.

Still, the big difference between the two countries is we totally have the right to publicy bash and trash talk gov't here in the US. This is maybe our greatest right.
It's pure politic. I do feel bad if anyone who still belived it. Let me ask you these. Is any of these what so called home owners ever pay for there house that they've lieve there for all those years? Or own it legally?  come on! It is china! Not USA! every property is own by the government.
Has anyone noticed the gentle subversion of health and human rights by China in the recent past . For example tainted toys flooding the market with poison lead content . Poison milk for their own children . To name just a few . WHY is it we will not trade with a communist country 90 miles away ,but we trade with a communist (totalitarin) country thousands of miles away . One in fact that has tried to poison our children, and in the case of the poison pet food of not long ago our pets . It seem as if a country that makes use a lot of money or has something we really want cheap we fight to the death for . Think Iraq, oil, think Veitnam, cheap labor .I think that if Samolia or Dufar made us as much money as the asian and middleastern countrys do or any other countrys in Africa we just ignore we would be on the ground in 24 hours to protect the cheap shoody goods the aforementioed countrys provide to the rich in the US. We have ,if you have a brain and have been alive 20 years, for way too long ignored these injustises . All who have read the book " Animal Fram" will understand this next passage . It seems the pigs (rich) make the rules to benifit themselves (not the sheep). Wake up people THE PIGS ARE SLEEPING ON SHEETS !!!!!!!!  
YOUR RIGHT BRUCE.  IF THE CHINESE HAD THE RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS, THEN THE GOVERNMENT WOULD BE A LITTLE MORE RESTRAINED.  I SPEAK CHINESE AND HAVE SEEN PUBLIC EXECUTIONS IN XIAN, CHINA.  IT HAPPENED IN AN ATHLETIC STADIUM IN FRONT OF THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE.  I WAS IN THE FOREIGNER HOTEL OVERLOOKING THE STADIUM.  OUR BEST TACT IS TO ENGAGE THE CHINESE THROUGH MUTUAL INTEREST SUCH AS BUSINESS AND ALLOW CHINESE TO TRAVEL FREELY TO THE US. THEN EVENTUALLY THE CHINESE WILL CHANGE FROM THE INSIDE OUT AND THE PRESURE WILL BE ON THEIR GOVERNMENT TO CHANGE ITS COMMUNISTIC, TOTALITARIAN TACTICS.
I have lived in China a couple of times, and these things are real. The things China did to get rid of the olympics was interesting. The closed down factories and put people out of jobs for months. Houses have been torn down to make the city look better. I have noticed that usually they give the residents new places to live, but I don't know with this particular situation. It's tough to tell.
   There are, however, good things that are taking place in China. It isn't just a horrible place where the government is inhumane. There are many sides to things.
Amazing! Oh my god,citizen have property ownership in a communist country? like China? Or you are trying to tell me that China is not a communist country?
The same sort of eviction could happen here in the US, due to the Supreme Court's Kelo decision. But, here, it shows a pattern of authoritarianism in a very, very evil country. Nixon's biggest mistake was prolonging the Viet Nam war; his second biggest mistake was opening the door to China. Unchecked, they could have more world influence than we do in a few decades.
We are all grateful to be Americans, and yet we still shop in stores that carry "Made in China' in nearly every corner of their inventory. We constantly gripe about job losses, yet we allow corporations to operate over there because we feel the extreme need to purchase our toilet paper for 5 cents less. Meanwhile, the Chinese workers are nothing but disposable people to their bosses, and the corporate executives sail off in their bonus-bought yachts. Shame on us.
Sadly, Hu Jintao's promises of Rule of Law and a Harmonious Society have been shown to be empty. Progress may be being made in China, but it seems that China takes a step back for every two steps forward.
I know a man who is in jail right now in TX. for not paying income tax years ago. They took a ranch away from his parents, brother and sister supposedly to settle the debt which was not even 1/3 the value of the ranch and now he has been jailed again and now one knows where the money from the ranch went. He has been held for way beyond the legal time to stand trial and when he tried to use it the judge wouldn't even hear him and locked him back up. This is happening all over so Americans be aware times are changing.
The October 2008 issue of National Geographic Magazine has a multi page spread about the wildfire growth in India and how eminent domain is taking land from the farmers to build roads and factories. Many of these farmers are not receiving a fair compensation for their land either. Seems that progress cannot be bothered with such niceties as due process, just get outta my way I'm coming through. The UN cannot and will not interfere.
Dennis of MN, yes, the government does move the people into other, usually highrise, housing. Dong probably stayed passed the window of moving time and now really has no place to go. These hutongs are beloved historic neighborhoods, cherished by the Chinese and many people around the world. But Beijing is over-populated, and many more people need housing than can fit into a traditional hutong. It's a sad trade-off. Some hutong have been preserved, but many more are gone. Yes, people have been relocated, often to buildings on the outskirts of the city that lack the neighborhood ambience of the hutongs. As bleak as this relocation is, the loss of a way of life that used to define this city, and the architecture that created it, is devastating.
James from Pittsburg obviously has some concerns about the objectivity of this report and makes a good point that there does not appear, at least, to be any attempt to get the other side of the story.  Regardless, I doubt any reasonably informed person could doubt that this sort of thing is going on in China, just as it is to a lesser degree here in places like New London, CT.  This is all the more reason to fight for our constitutional rights to freedom of speech and to bear arms.  Let us not forget that these rights were written into the US Constitution to protect us from despotic dictator governments.
This article is an example of just one of many reasons the world should not trust China.
The day will come, when American companies can say good-bye to the money they invested in China.  Mark my words, they will nationalize our foreign investments over there.  Then how will American companies compete in the world market when there is no manufacturing plants here?
Sounds like GITMO! Forced eviction-imminent domain-is a ruthless policy. It's impositon in China is tyrannical. Prior to the Olympics,there were 4 years of unremitting wholesale evictions. Swaths of Beijing were sacrificed to the making-modern mania.In 1997 100,000 people in Hubei were forcibly evicted from ancestral homes to make way for the 3 Gorges Dam project. Today, that figure is 1million adn encompasses 4,000 villages along its 317miles stretch. Many have been rehoused in makeshift cities; many are still without shelter. The great snowstorm during last Chinese new year resulted in stranded millions who were forced to seek shelter outside: the authorities closed the train stations. Forced evictions on a grand scale are part of China's imperial history. Ni Yulan's plight is another footnote retailing China's avaricious internal policies.
I am not schocked by this as this happened to my husband's aunt's house as well. She was given a year to live and the government wanted to kick her out of her house to make way for a new wider road. They already started knocking down houses all around her months before she passed away. With lots of pleas, the government let her pass away in her house and then knocked it down soon after. I believe they didn't receive any money from the government.
And thank China for hogging all the oil, and poisening us with lead toys and contminated milk products!  Thank you!
I've always looked to both sides of any problem, why not have the contractor build new homes in a country wide setting for retired people with shopping centers and hospitals, this way both sides get pretty much what they want in the end results. dong if that is his real name can't fight city hall by himself , but if he comes up with a reasonable plan of action, there are winners on both sides of the fence. Grant you China does have a different standard of government then the United States does, but reasonable people can work their differances out to suit everyone concerned. Going to jail or prison serves no purpose for either side, but by working together problems are solved for the benifit of both sides. screaming murder get peoples attention but doesn't bring the two sides together. Now that is strictly my opinion on how things should be handled.
I feel I am an expert on life in modern China, having lived there five years non-stop, and I will return in 2009. Believe the writer, believe the Mr. Dong. If you want a true accounting of this extreme situation in China, read "Out of Mao's Shadow" (author, Philip Pan), and go to the chapter entitled, "The Rich Lady".

It goes into much more detail of people just like Mr. Dong who had their homes destroyed so they could put in some pretty new roads, at the expense of losing one of Beijing's historical hutong districts. Hope you enjoyed your view from the Marriot, it's a shame you don't appreciate the historic value of the area Mr. Dong's house, and thousands like him (a quote from the story I mentioned above, page 165:"It took us twenty-eight days to demolish the houses of 2,100 families," Wang Shouyuan, a former city official whome Chen hired as the general manager of the project, told me. "This was unprecdented at the time. We finished the demolition and relocation work on the street, and it caused a sensation in Beijing. There were no appeals, no negative reaction at all." Meanwhile, hundreds did appeal, to no avail.
there are billions of chinese and while the number being tortured and treated this poorly may be few it should not be insignificant. boycott walmart and the chinese imports through the peoples buying power and have your congress person know how you feel...maybe a boycott or ban on imports..we need to make their government see that if their economy is faltering now- they will have an even rougher time ahead unless they instill some fairness and laws to protect ALL their people.
Just like the reporting of all the bad things happening in Iraq.  There needs to be some objective journalism. Like Iraq, there are good things happening in China, and many people benefit. Growth has it's cost and this article raises legitimate issues but only from one mans perspective.  Two sides to the story and the truth lies somewhere in the middle
Just like the reporting of all the bad things happening in Iraq.  There needs to be some objective journalism. Like Iraq, there are good things happening in China, and many people benefit. Growth has it's cost and this article raises legitimate issues but only from one mans perspective.  Two sides to the story and the truth lies somewhere in the middle
C'mon people, tht's the way it is in most uncivilized countries, and China, despite its riches is still a third world country.The laws and standards we have in the US or Britain or France do not apply to China, Africa and some middle eastern countries, Reality there is different from what we have here.
There is a good book on this subject by Minnestoa author Michael Meyer.  The title The Last Days of Old Beijing. It is a eye-opening read.  I can't see how this much change could occur anywhere but in a communist country.  I was in Beijing in April '08.  There is so much building going on I can only imagine how land acquisitions for "development" are made.  The urban landscape was ultra-modern buildings and infra-structure meets bombed-out WWII Germany.  Rubble and debris, garbage in the streets
I have spent much time in China and have a home and family there, in Beijing. I have walked the streets of Beijing and the neighborhoods all around Beijing.

Many of these homes are hundreds of years old, with no running water or sewage.

Until recently, most of China was at least 50 to 100 years behind the west in infrastructure.

Can you imaging still having slums right in the heart of Washington DC??  Would not happen in DC and will not happen in Beijing or any other major Chinese city.

Americans need to grow up and face reality, and understand the facts instead of always thinking what China does is always suppressive. It is just not the facts.


"The End Justifies the Means" as they should say in China - what a corrupt government that claims to represent the people. What a cruel laugh by those who run China. The masses are stepped on continuously there. And they thought communism was democratic - Ha Ha


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