Seizure of abandoned rails shook a nation's conscience By Liu Dan (Chinadaily.com.cn) Updated: 2005-10-25 16:04 Police has detained eight
villagers who seized state-owned rail tracks and other facilities for their own
use in Yongdeng County, a less-developed area of Northwest China’s Gansu
Province on Sunday.
The Lanzhou Morning Post reported Monday that more than 100 farmers and their
children began to dismantle and grab a 600-metre-long outdated segment of the
iron rails Sunday morning, which the rail authorities no longer used.
A total of eight appalling graphics, showing the mass seizure scene, have
been shown on the popular sina.com and sohu.com portal Web pages, triggering a
wild public response, and a heated discussion.
Interestingly, the majority of the online readers side with the farmers,
simply because they might be poor, left far behind the urban noveau rich.
One reader sympathizing with the farmers said the villagers “as a matter of
fact” went to recycle the rail scrap, “changing wastes into valuables.”
Many questioned the ever-growing wealth gap between the haves and have-nots.
However, some criticized the looting residents as not being law-abiding.
The seizure happened at the Da Lu rail station, in Yondeng’s Kushui Town.
Hearing the news the 600-metre old trails were to be abandoned, local villagers
flocked to the station with pickaxes and ripping bars. Some were witnessed
bagging the iron material home.
Scrap iron and steel can be sold at a discount price.
The newspaper also reported the railway workers at the station did not try to
stop the farmers from looting. One picture showed a rail worker sitting at the
scene, motionless.
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