Authorities in the Chinese capital on Monday detained more than 1,000 veterans of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) who gathered outside government buildings in protest over lack of income, protesters said.
"There were 20 buses that took us to the Tongzhou district of Beijing, to the side of a road in the countryside," PLA veteran and long-time petitioner Yang Suiquan told RFA from one of the buses.
"The buses have all stopped here, and we are still sitting on the bus."
Yang said the buses, each of which had a police escort aboard, appeared to have stopped outside a former army barracks.
"It's the police who are bringing us out here," Yang said. "There were 20 buses with several dozen people on each one, so there are more than 1,000 people here, at the very least."
Yang said the veterans had arrived in Beijing on June 23, in the hope of lodging a formal complaint, and had been promised a reply within a 60-day time limit.
"But there has been no reply to date, and nobody was doing anything about it, so we went back there again," he said.
China's tightly controlled state media ran a few positive features on PLA veterans to coincide with the massive PLA military parade on Sept. 3 marking the 70th anniversary of the defeat of Japan at the end of World War II, Yang said.
But the reports had neglected to mention that many veterans of China's brief 1979 border war with Vietnam and the Korean War (1950-1953), live in extreme hardship in old age, he said.
"We gave our best, but when we got back, they didn't do anything to help us earn a living, find work, get medical care or social security payments," Yang said. "The local governments say they can't do anything, but maybe they just don't want to."
"We have been forced into petitioning, into pressing our demands," he said.
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