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Chinese police drag grieving parents from protest
China Earthquake XH 5145728
Chinese police officers take away parents who lost children to the May 12 quake and kneeled outside the court house in Dujiangyan, southwestern China's Sichuan province, Tuesday, June 3, 2008. Chinese police dragged away more than 100 parents Tuesday while they were protesting the deaths of their children in poorly constructed schools that collapsed in last month's earthquake. - photo by Associated Press
    DUJIANGYAN, China — Chinese police forcefully pulled away more than 100 parents protesting the deaths of their children in a poorly constructed school that collapsed in last month’s earthquake.
    Police grabbed the parents, many holding pictures of their children, by the arms and lifted resisters off the ground on Tuesday outside the courthouse in Dujiangyan, a resort town northwest of the Sichuan provincial capital of Chengdu.
    ‘‘Why?’’ some parents yelled. ‘‘Tell us something,’’ they said as black-suited police wearing riot helmets yanked at them, pulling them down the street to the side of the courthouse.
    The action was authorities’ harshest response yet to angry parents and represented a hardening of official attitudes toward protests that police have closely watched over the past two weeks without intervening.
    The parents had been kneeling in front of the courthouse yelling, ‘‘We want to sue!’’ Their children attended a high school in Juyuan, near Dujiangyan, where 270 students died.
    The Southern Metropolis News quoted a rescuer as saying that rubble from the school showed that no steel reinforcing bars had been used in construction, only iron wire.
    The government says the May 12 earthquake destroyed 7,000 classrooms. Many parents have accused contractors of cutting corners when building the classrooms, resulting in schools that could not withstand the 7.9-magnitude quake. Pictures of collapsed schools surrounded by buildings still standing have fueled anger.
    An Associated Press reporter and two photographers covering the protest were dragged by the arms up the steps into the courthouse by police trying to prevent them from seeing the demonstration. They were held inside, along with two Japanese reporters, and questioned for a half-hour before being let go, after the protesters had been moved away.
    Calls to local police were not answered Tuesday.
    Asked why reporters were removed from the courthouse, an official from the foreign affairs office of the local government, Zao Ming, said ‘‘this is not a good place to do interviews. ... In a disaster like this, there will be a lot of opinions. The government will solve their problems.’’
    There were several Japanese reporters at the courthouse. One witness said the police told the parents ‘‘the Japanese are reporting bad things about you.’’ The witness asked not to be identified for fear of reprisals by authorities.
    Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said Tuesday that the government had been unusually open about allowing journalists to report on the earthquake and its aftermath. He told a news conference in Beijing that the ‘‘principle of transparency and openness remains unchanged.’’
    He said local authorities were making decisions based on the conditions in the disaster zone, though ‘‘they are not trying to block any news or to make difficulties for the reporters.’’
    The protest happened while Chinese leader Li Changchun, the country’s fifth-ranked ruler, was touring other parts of the city. The official Xinhua News Agency said Li was checking heritage sites damaged in the earthquake.
    The confirmed death toll for China’s worst disaster in three decades was raised Tuesday to 69,107, an increase of about 90 people from a day earlier, and 18,230 people are still missing, the State Council said. The quake also left 5 million people homeless.
    Meanwhile, the official Xinhua News Agency said that authorities have delayed for two days an attempt to divert water from a huge lake formed when the quake sent landslides tumbling into a river in Beichuan in northern Sichuan.
    Water levels in the lake had been rising steadily and threatened to flood surrounding areas, prompting authorities to evacuate nearly 200,000 people already uprooted by the quake.
    But Xinhua said with little rain forecast for the next several days, rescue workers were not likely to start draining off the water until Thursday. The work had been expected to begin Tuesday.
    Workers have already used heavy equipment to dig a runoff channel to remove the water. The government is worried the newly formed lake could burst, sending a wall of water through a valley.
    In an indication of how difficult rescue conditions are in parts of Sichuan, there was still no sign of a helicopter that crashed more than three days ago while ferrying survivors. Thousands of soldiers have been combing remote mountains in search of the military helicopter.
    The Russian-designed Mi-171 transport was carrying 19 people, 14 of them people injured in the quake, when it flew into fog and turbulence and crashed Saturday near the epicenter of the quake in the town of Wenchuan, state media reported.

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