Chinese Express Anger at Video of Police Attacking Seniors Sorting Trash

Chinese netizens outraged at the violence committed by the police.
Chinese Express Anger at Video of Police Attacking Seniors Sorting Trash
An elderly scavenger picks up construction waste from a garbage dump in Hefei, Anhui Province on Dec. 9, 2012. Police roughed up two senior scavengers for violating traffic in Henan Province. (STR/AFP/Getty Images)
Frank Fang
2/1/2016
Updated:
2/2/2016

A video of agents of the state in China administering violence against elderly people has appeared online, outraging Internet users. The violence in this case was not carried out by China’s notorious chengguan, or urban enforcement officials, but instead by auxiliary police, who are caught on tape as they beat a senior couple who collect recyclables.

Auxiliary police are, like chengguan, often ill-trained, not very well paid, and serve as volunteer or replacement staff when professional police manpower is insufficient.

The video was shot in Qilian District in Yunnan Province, and has circulated on Sina Weibo, China’s Twitter-like service. The elderly man is seen being repeatedly beaten by a man in uniform as he struggles to fend the officer away. When his wife tries to come to his aid, she is also attacked. The police said the couple had broken traffic rules.

At the end of the video, a driver can be heard cursing and shouting at the officers not to hit women.

The attackers have since been suspended from their jobs, according to Sina, a Chinese news website.

Netizens on Sina Weibo had reacted with outrage. A netizen from Shanxi wrote: “I think the chengguan and auxiliary police are all made up of local thugs. They can’t be provoked.”

A netizen calling himself “zuofu_521” from Liaoning wrote: “Is that all, job suspension? Did they not break the law?? All I want to know is whether the police broke the law by beating up other people.”

“The auxiliary police again? I just don’t understand that how the auxiliary police have so much power nowadays,” wrote another citizen from Qinghai.

So-called auxiliary police are mostly untrained members of the public, some perhaps already given to violence, who sign a one to three year contract with the security bureau. They’re given a baton and told to patrol the streets, asking for identification cards and keeping order.

But they often overstep their proper authority in boorish and aggressive displays.

In September last year in Henan Province, two auxiliary police officers began groping a woman at a karaoke bar. When she refused their advances and demanded an apology for their conduct, they began punching her, reports said. Those two auxiliary police officers were fired.

Frank Fang is a Taiwan-based journalist. He covers U.S., China, and Taiwan news. He holds a master's degree in materials science from Tsinghua University in Taiwan.
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