Arab Times

Chinese investors held after metals exchange protest plans

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BEIJING, Oct 29, (AFP): Hundreds of Chinese investors who lost vast sums on a failed metals exchange were detained to stop them mounting a protest in Beijing, several of them told AFP on Thursday.

The move to prevent the demonstrat­ion against the state-managed Fanya Metals Exchange reveals the authoritie­s’ sensitivit­y to unrest linked to financial losses in China, where stock markets have plummeted in recent months, wiping trillions off valuations.

The protest was planned for Monday and would have coincided with the start of a key Communist Party meeting in Beijing.

Yu Haichao was among more than 2,000 investors who travelled to Beijing to take part, but police knocked on the door of her Beijing hotel room around midnight and told her they would take her to a meeting to resolve the dispute, she said.

Instead she was driven to a detention centre on the outskirts of Beijing, where about 300 other would-be protesters had already been corralled, she told AFP.

“I was kept in a cold room with about 100 others without food, water or heat,” Yu said. “They used such a show of force, and we didn’t even break the law.”

“I was terrified, I feel completely helpless,” she added. “I will never protest again.”

The protesters were forced by police to sign a pledge that they would not attend any gathering related to protest about the exchange, she said, and the following day officials took her back to her home province Shanxi.

Three other people AFP spoke to gave similar accounts to Yu, while another investor, Klaus Zhu, evaded police after hearing others were being carried off.

While most of the Fanya protesters were sent back to their home towns, accompanie­d by local government officials, about a dozen have been held by police and formally detained, said Zhu.

Zhu said he had invested one million yuan ($157,000) in the exchange after seeing state television endorsing the project.

The Fanya exchange in southern China offered investors a bet on increased metal prices, promising some double-digit returns on their investment­s.

Many Chinese financial institutio­ns offer high-return investment schemes based on increasing asset prices, but slowing growth has heightened fears that such products could go bust, potentiall­y sparking social unrest.

Fanya’s problems date back to before the Chinese stock market plunges that began in June.

China’s main financial institutio­ns are government-run, and many expect the state to step in when the investment­s they have chosen go bad.

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