The attack was part of a disagreement between residents of Gansu province and the vast Inner Mongolia region it borders to the north, state newspapers reported.
According to ABC news; China's government regularly cites such incidents as justification for
heavy-handed Communist Party rule. Often driven by economic or ethnic
rivalries, such incidents stretch the capacity of local law enforcement
bodies to cope, especially in the relatively impoverished west.
More than 100 men with their faces covered descended on the Ejin Banner
office complex at about 3 a.m. on Sunday, the Ejin Banner county
government said on its website.
They used pepper spray on staff members and herders who were helping
guard the premises, the government said. They were hooded, threatened,
beaten with clubs and dumped outside where temperatures were about -20
Celsius (-4 Fahrenheit), the government said. Six men were taken to
hospital for treatment.
Photos on the website showed demolished pre-fabricated structures and
pick-up trucks crushed from being flipped over. The Ejin Banner
government said the attackers used two bulldozers to carry out the
destruction and also stole any personal or government property they
could find.
Reports said the attack likely grew out of a long-running dispute over
land rights in Ejin Banner, which had been part of Gansu until it was
returned to Inner Mongolia in 1979. No suspects have been named
publicly.
The vast region is home to 32,000 people, mostly farmers and herders,
along with the Jiuquan satellite launch center used to launch China's
crewed space missions.
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