CHENGDU, Feb. 20 (Xinhua) -- A quake-hit township in southwest China's
Sichuan Province has returned to calm after a villagers-police clash caused by a
dispute over relief subsidies allocation, local authorities said Friday.
The conflict occurred at 9:40 a.m. Wednesday when about 20 villagers
surrounded the police station in Baolin Township, Anxian County of Mianyang,
asking for the release of their family members detained for beating Zhou Lujin,
chief of Yongquan Village, after a quarrel over subsidies allocation, said Zhou
Baoquan, a publicity official of the county.
Mianyang was one of the worst hit cities in the devastating May12
earthquake last year.
In the quarrel, five villagers, led by Yi Jianqiong and her husband Wang
Daisen, claimed that they did not receive the quake-relief subsidies. But Zhou
Lujin said he had handed the money to Yi's father. The five then beat the
village chief, the official said.
He said Zhou Lujin suffered multiple injuries.
"Nobody died in the incident on Wednesday," he noted. "The death of Wang
Changyuan, father of Wang Qiongfang, one of the detainees, had nothing to do
with the incident," Zhou Baoquan said.
An autopsy showed that the man died in hospital Wednesday as a result of
drinking pesticide over a family dispute on Feb. 6, he said.
About 100 policemen gathered in the township to restore order Wednesday.
The crowd dispersed at around 5 p.m. that day.
Some police and villagers were injured in Wednesday's clash, Zhou Baoquan
said.
The local government is investigating villagers' complaints over subsidies
allocation, he added.