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Chinese military veterans stage protests in central Beijing over pensions

Hundreds of protesters, dressed in green and blue camouflage fatigues, gathered on Wednesday morning outside the Communist Party's anti-corruption agency, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, standing in rows and chanting slogans.

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Chinese military veterans have demonstrated in central Beijing for two days, demanding unpaid retirement benefits in a fresh wave of protests highlighting China's challenge in managing demobilised troops.

Hundreds of protesters, dressed in green and blue camouflage fatigues, gathered on Wednesday morning outside the Communist Party's anti-corruption agency, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, standing in rows and chanting slogans.

Reuters was sent footage of the protest by participants.

A smaller gathering of protesters congregated outside the Ministry of Civil Affairs on Thursday morning but was swiftly dispersed, a demobilised soldier told Reuters, citing protesters at the scene.

China's Defence Ministry, Ministry of Civil Affairs and Central Commission for Discipline Inspection did not respond immediately to requests for comment.

Chinese President Xi Jinping announced in 2015 the People's Liberation Army would cut troop levels by 300,000, targeting the bulk of the reductions by the end of 2017, as it seeks to spend more money on high-tech weapons for its navy and air force and become a leaner and more strategic fighting force.

Grievances over military pensions have been a long-running issue but have flared into organised mass protests with increasing frequency over recent months.

More than 1,000 veterans demonstrated outside Defence Ministry headquarters in Beijing last October, and reports of scattered protests across the country surface regularly.

Zhao Xinyue, a former volunteer soldier from central Henan province, said protesters had travelled from all around China, but police had blocked many from reaching the capital.

Protesters said authorities were required to assign jobs to returned soldiers or provide benefits in lieu of jobs.

"It used to be as volunteer soldiers, when we returned home we had land," Zhao said. "Now we don't have jobs, no retirement pension, we have nothing."

Large shows of public dissent in front of major government buildings are rare, and authorities in Beijing typically tighten security and restrict travel to the capital each year ahead of the National People's Congress, which begins next weekend.

Chinese media did not report the protests, unlike in October when state newspapers printed a government statement promising to tackle the difficulties facing demobilised soldiers.

Previous protests by demobilised soldiers have included some who fought against Vietnam in 1979 and complained about problems with their pensions.

Many people try to use "petitions" to bypass the legal system and bring complaints directly to the attention of government officials, a process that dates back to imperial times, though some cases do end up in court.

 

(This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)

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