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Authorities in a large
Chinese city are investigating a work gang of a property development company,
which bullied local residents into vacating their homes, threatening to infect
them with AIDS unless they comply.
RT.com reports the case surfaces in the prefecture-level city of Nanyang in central
Henan Province. The city government looked into reports of this ‘AIDS
demolition team’ in social media and said such a gang indeed existed.
The reports distributed
through Weibo microblogging service showed pictures of threatening red graffiti
on a building wall saying “AIDS demolition team.”
The crew claimed to have
AIDS patients in their ranks and threatened people living in areas slated for
demolition and development with the disease to force them out.
Local residents said they
had been harassed this way since early December, with some leaving out of fear,
news agency Xinhua reported.
China Daily cites local
residents as saying that the bullying tactic in other forms had been employed
in the neighborhood since as early as 2012, with houses being illegally cut
from utilities.
The ‘AIDS demolition team’
allegedly had six members, who had papers confirming their AIDS diagnosis. But
authorities said they have not yet established whether the papers were fakes or
the bullies were actually carrying the deadly HIV virus.
The company that employed
the demolition team has been shut down for the time of the investigation, a
Nanyang government official said.
The Henan province was one
of the first in China to face a serious AIDS epidemic in the 1990s. The disease
spread among local villagers, who engaged in selling their blood for medical
purposes. The blood was often collected by shady clinics in unsanitary
conditions with unsterilized needles that served as vectors for spreading the
disease.
HIV/AIDS patients are often stigmatized in China,
where a large degree of ignorance remains about the disease and the dangers
carriers can pose to the public. Last week a Chinese village launched an
education campaign after some 200 villagers signed a petition to expel an
eight-year-old boy infected with the HIV. The boy’s grandfather was among the
signatories.
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