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Violence as Sars spreads in China
Beijing - Farmers
in a town in eastern China beat up officials and ransacked a
government office where at least six local residents suspected of
having Sars had been quarantined after returning from Beijing, a
witness and local officials said today.
Beijing, China's hardest-hit area,
isolated 80 reservoirs to protect its drinking water supply, a
newspaper reported. The number of people quarantined in the city in an
attempt to control the spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome
reached almost 16,000, according to the city government.
The spread of the disease, which has
killed at least 206 people on China's mainland and affected more than
4,200, has caused widespread anxiety and prompted some villages to try
to block visitors from Beijing and other affected areas.
In coastal Zhejiang province, several
thousand villagers had been protesting in front of the local
government building in the town of Xiandie since May 3, when the
travellers returned from Beijing, said a villager, who refused to give
her name.
"They shouldn't have
hospitalised patients in the government building, which has no medical
facilities and professional staff," said the villager, who was
reached by telephone.
Last week, protesters in a village
east of Beijing ransacked a school, smashing windows and furniture
after hearing the building was to be used as a Sars ward.
The Beijing Youth Daily reported that
80 reservoirs for the capital have been isolated and police patrols
have been set up along the Yongding river, an important water source
for the city.
The measures, which began on
Saturday, will prevent vehicles and people from getting close to the
river. Villagers have also set up barricades on roads leading to the
river, the report said.
The city government referred all
questions to the article.
In Beijing, 15,873 people suspected
of being exposed to the Sars virus have been quarantined, the city
government said on its website.
Entire buildings have been isolated
in mass quarantines, including dormitories at Northern Jiaotong
University, Central University of Finance and Economics, and the
People's Hospital of Peking University, as well as apartments and
construction sites, the website said.
Beijing has more than 1,800 cases of
infection - nearly half the county's total - and 103 deaths. The city
reported 98 new cases today, the second day in a row that the number
has dipped below 100.
Nevertheless, the city government
said yesterday that its elementary and junior high schools will stay
closed for two more weeks, extending a closure that was to end
Wednesday and keeping 1.37 million students at home.
In Xiandie, the witness said five
villagers broke into the building last night, shattering windows and
smashing furniture in some offices.
Three officials trying to stop the
violence were injured, the witness said. She said the five protesters
were later detained by police.
An officer in Yuhuan county public
security bureau said two people who led the attack would be detained
for between five and seven days. Five other detainees would be
released later, said the policeman, who gave only his surname, Chen.
It was not clear when the two additional people were detained.
The witness said villagers continued
their protest today, when they heard three more people had been placed
under quarantine inside the building.
An official with the Xiandie Township
government confirmed that several people returning from "Sars
affected areas" have been isolated in the offices, but said none
has developed symptoms.
"We are just implementing
government orders. Nothing is dangerous, because no one is sick
here," said the official, who gave only her surname, Dong.
Meanwhile, a Beijing film company is
reportedly preparing to make a movie about a nurse's battle against
Sars, and has asked prominent actress Gong Li to play the lead role. --
Guardian News
Brudirect.com
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