In 1995 Qian Mingqi's home was demolished by government authorities to make way for a highway. He then saved up enough money to build a second home, which was also shattered by a second forced demolition. His second house cost about 500,000
yuan, and the authorities paid him only half of that for compensation. Because of the lack of compensation, he posted slogans to resist the demolition. According to his neighbors, Qian's wife was then hung upside down by the demolition team. She died a few years later from
gall bladder disease. From the police report of the Fuzhou Police, Qian's wife has been dead for several years. After the ordeal he then discovered the land seized from him to make a highway was actually not used. On one of his blogs, he accused the
Linchuan district party cadres of embezzling 10 million yuan in compensation funds after demolishing his house and that of seven other families. Bombings, especially ones of this sophistication, are rare in China, but this was the second in a month. Earlier in May 2011 in north-west
Gansu province a "
petrol bomb" was set off outside a bank by a former employee. There are very few ways for the Chinese people to redress or raise awareness of what they see as a wrong they have suffered, and therefore, as the
BBC's Michael Bristow states, "some Chinese people occasionally take out their frustration in attacks like this." ==Incident==