China kills pipeline project in response to violent anti-pollution protests

GlobalPost

China today terminated work on an industrial waste pipeline following massive protests by citizens concerned that the project would pollute their seawater, reported BBC News.

More from GlobalPost: China arrests more than 10,000 for internet 'crimes'

At least 1,000 people took to the streets shouting anti-pipeline chants in the coastal city of Qidong, where the proposed pipeline was going to start dumping wastewater generated by a paper factory, reported Reuters.

Troops have been sent in to quell the unrest.

Officials ealier offered to suspend the project in a bid to calm growing tensions, but concerned citizens were having none of it, according to BBC

"If the government really wanted to stop this project, they should have done it right from the beginning," 17-year-old protester Xi Feng told Reuters. "At this point they are too late."

Demonstrators also broke into government offices and destroyed equipment, said Reuters. A local official told BBC that outraged protesters even ripped the shirt off his back. 

Public anger over environmental damage in China is reported to be widespread. 

Today's protest in Qidong, which lies about an hour north of Shanghai, comes amid a recent spate of environmentally-charged rallies in China, said Reuters.

The pipeline is the second industrial project to be killed this month, with the government earlier scrapping plans to build copper plant in Sichuan province following major protests, said BBC

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