「山东济南公安局长亲自抢地,抓走五村民(2026.01.23)」2026年1月23日,山东济南李坊村,随着五名村民被警察抓走,一场持续了两年的“土地保卫战”彻底宣告失守。在推土机的轰鸣声中,村民们辛勤种植的50余亩小麦、数千棵果树,以及在废墟上艰难搭建的临时板房,顷刻间被夷为平地。
冲突的起因,是山东济南新旧动能转换起步区太平街道的一个大型水库项目,为修建该项目,太平街道 6 个村约 2 万余亩土地被占用,约 7000 人被迫搬迁。对于这项“国家级重大战略水利工程”,李坊村村民最初并非全然抵触。他们曾表示:故土虽难离,但若政府能将搬迁对生活的影响降至最低,给予合理安置,他们愿意支持水利建设。 然而现实却给了他们沉重一击。政府给出的赔偿标准过低,根本无法支撑村民在异地重建家园。因无法接受“越拆越穷”的命运,村民们普遍拒绝搬迁。
在过去的两年里,为了推进项目,当地政府手段尽出。暴力强拆、断水断电、深夜突袭已成常态,原本的村庄早已变成一片瓦砾。然而,部分顽强的村民选择留了下来,他们在废墟之上重新搭建板房,日夜坚守脚下的土地。 板房上,“强拆必赔”、“维权不后退”、“还我家园”的标语触目惊心。村民们甚至准备了燃烧瓶,试图背水一战。但这些悲壮的举动,在强大的国家机器面前显得脆弱不堪。
1月19日至22日的四天里,当局多次调集大量人员与警察进村,试图赶走村民,但由于村民的顽强抵抗而未能得逞。
1月23日,为了彻底拿下这片土地,起步区一名公安局长亲自出马,率领数十名警察进入了村庄,参与强拆。由于担心暴行被记录,警察及强拆人员提前拆除了村民安装的监控摄像头。 面对来势汹汹的强拆队,村民曾多次出示合法的土地使用证明,但被视若无睹。 绝望之中,村民爬上板房的顶端进行最后的抗议。但因力量过于悬殊,村民防线很快崩溃,五名村民被当场抓走。
被抓走的五名村民,随即被关押进当地的拘留所内,截止27日,仍未被释放。
Jinan Police Chief Personally Leads Land Seizure, Five Villagers Arrested (January 23, 2026)
On January 23, 2026, in Lifang Village, Jinan, Shandong Province, a two-year-long “battle for the defense of the land” ended in total defeat as five villagers were taken away by police. Amidst the roar of bulldozers, over 50 mu (approx. 8.2 acres) of wheat painstakingly cultivated by the villagers, thousands of fruit trees, and temporary prefab houses built upon the ruins were razed to the ground in an instant.
The conflict stemmed from a large-scale reservoir project in the Taiping Subdistrict of the “Jinan New and Old Kinetic Energy Conversion Start-up Area.” To facilitate the project, approximately 20,000 mu of land across six villages in Taiping Subdistrict was requisitioned, forcing the relocation of about 7,000 people. Initially, the villagers of Lifang were not entirely opposed to this “major national strategic water conservancy project.” They had expressed that although it was difficult to leave their native soil, they were willing to support the water infrastructure construction if the government could minimize the impact of relocation on their lives and provide reasonable resettlement.
However, reality dealt them a crushing blow. The compensation standards offered by the government were far too low to support the villagers in rebuilding their homes elsewhere. Unable to accept a fate of “becoming poorer the more they are demolished,” the villagers generally refused to relocate.
Over the past two years, to push the project forward, the local government exhausted every means available. Violent forced demolitions, cutting off water and electricity, and midnight raids became the norm, turning the original village into a landscape of rubble long ago. Nevertheless, some tenacious villagers chose to stay, erecting prefab houses on the ruins and guarding the land beneath their feet day and night. Slogans such as “Compensation is a must for forced demolition,” “No retreat in defending rights,” and “Return my home” painted on the temporary structures were shocking to behold. Villagers had even prepared Molotov cocktails, attempting a last-ditch stand. Yet, these tragic and heroic gestures appeared fragile and insignificant in the face of the powerful state apparatus.
For four days, from January 19 to January 22, authorities repeatedly mobilized large numbers of personnel and police to enter the village in an attempt to drive the villagers away, but they failed due to the villagers’ staunch resistance.
On January 23, to seize control of the land once and for all, a Public Security Bureau (Police) Chief from the Start-up Area personally took the field, leading dozens of officers into the village to participate in the forced demolition. Fearing that their brutal acts would be documented, the police and demolition crews preemptively dismantled surveillance cameras installed by the villagers.
Facing the menacing demolition squad, villagers repeatedly presented their legal land use certificates, but these were turned a blind eye. In despair, villagers climbed to the roofs of their prefab houses to stage a final protest. However, due to the sheer disparity in strength, the villagers’ line of defense quickly collapsed, and five villagers were arrested on the spot.
The five arrested villagers were immediately taken into custody at the local detention center. As of the 27th, they have yet to be released.
