Special report: Dalai's separatist activities condemned
By Xinhua Writers Bai Xu and Nie Jianjiang
MAQU, Gansu Province, March 22 (Xinhua) -- Sun
Qingyu's ten-square-meter shop became barely recognizable.
All the shelves were pushed down, dotted by glass
scraps and trampled snack packages. Name of the shop was Qingxing cigarette and
wine shop, but the cigarettes and wines which were among the most expensive in
the commodities had been robbed away.
Standing in the bedroom carpeted with sprinkled
flour, the dark-skinned shopkeeper in his 30s quivered with anger.
"These mobsters were scoundrels. They not only took
things away, but destroy the remainder," he complained, "look at the food on the
floor! Can any human being do anything like this?"
From 5 p.m. till midnight last Sunday, some rioters
marched in the seat of Maqu county of northwester Gansu Province and broke into
governmental buildings and shops, inflicting great losses to the local.
"I heard big noises outside. Before I could realize
what to do, several yelling mobsters wavering iron sticks forced in," recalled
Sun, "They began to smash things soonest after they set foot in my shop,
followed by another group who did likewise."
"I locked the door of my bedroom, but they pounded it
with sticks...my five-year-old son was scared and started crying. I have to make
a hole in the corner of the room to help my wife and son flee," he said, adding
a string of curses.
In fact, many other people in the plateau Maqu county
with a population of about 33,300 shared similar experiences as Sun.
In the Yangguang wine shop where garbages were piled
at the gate, Tang Yongqiang was cleaning the glass scraps with his relatives.
"I closed the iron gate, but the rioters pried it
open like mad people," said the furious man.
"They slashed and battered the counters with their
knives and clubs, crying 'bug off'. Those villains not only took away trunks of
cigarettes and wines, poured the tea into their own bags, but broke the safe and
robbed the about 10,000 yuan (about 1,408 U.S. dollars) inside."
When those people were about to finish, several women
rushed into set fire. Tang tried to stop them, only to be beaten and forced to
hide into a toilet.
The Huanghe electrical appliances store ran by Ma
Qinghua was the biggest of its kind in the Maqu county. But rather than
televisions and microwave ovens, the shop is now full of ashes.
"I saw the commodities worthy of nearly one million
yuan (about 140,845 U.S. dollars) turn into ashes helplessly," he signed, "for
several times, we attempted to put off the fire with fire extinguishers, but
rioters brandishing knives stopped us."
According to preliminary statistics of the county
government of Maqu, 70 percent of the shops were looted or damaged by rioters,
while more than 100 big stores like Ma's suffered tremendous losses in the
incident.
"I have been doing business in Maqu for twenty years
and witnessed the development of the county. Tibetan herdsmen now could use
faucet water and electricity, and roads were built to their houses. It is high
time to enjoy life, and I couldn't understand why someone would ruin it," said
Ma.
Unrest broke out in the Tibetan capital on March 14,
which was repeated in the counties of Xiahe, Maqu, Luqu and Jone and Hezuo City
in the Gannan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Gansu and the Aba County of
Sichuan.
China's state television CCTV screened a video clip
showing mobs riding horses and wielding batons. Some of them shouted slogans of
"Tibet Independence" and waved flags of "Tibetan-government-in-exile". They
stormed government offices, police stations, hospitals, schools, banks, shops
and markets, among others, witnesses were recorded as saying.
