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Wukan protest leader Yang Semao arrested, accused of taking bribes

Yang Semao, who secured village post after leading historic protests against old leadership, has been criminally detained ahead of elections

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Deputy Wukan chief Yang Semao, shown here in 2011, was the only village committee member still in contention for a seat. Photo: AFP

A Wukan official who helped lead the village's historic anti-corruption protests in 2011 was released last night after being held for more than 24 hours on bribery allegations.

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The criminal detention of deputy Wukan chief Yang Semao on Thursday came just days before the village is expected to hold a pivotal election that many observers believe will decide the fate of its nascent democracy.

After his release last night, Yang denied accepting bribes related to village projects, as claimed in a statement by the Lufeng county government, which oversees Wukan.

"They only asked me things about my work, likes projects I am in charge of," Yang said. "But they can't find anything because I didn't take any bribes."

Yang, a businessman in his late 40s, helped lead a series of mass protests after officials in the eastern Guangdong village sold one of its last pieces of collectively owned land to developers without their approval.

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The protests were reported by media around the world and the ruling Communist Party eventually allowed villagers to elect a village committee from among their own ranks.

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