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As of Friday, September 08, 2006 20:33:26 -0400 this is what we have on this specific dream drawing prediction. If your able to help provide proof or information on this specific drawing, please click here to send me an email. You will receive full credit for your find, to include reward monies. Please include the exact date of the dream and the DD number. And again, thank you for your time, its very much appreciated.
12/7/2005

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Says "500" students will be shot and killed in a square in China...all I know...and again, the letters maybe Chinese.
DONGZHOU, China - China on Saturday blamed a deadly confrontation between authorities and demonstrators in a village near Hong Kong on "a few instigators" who organized an attack on a wind power plant, prompting police to open fire.
China said in its first official comments on Tuesday's confrontation that three villagers were killed. Residents, however, said as many as 20 people were killed.
The state-run Xinhua News Agency said police opened fire on villagers in Dongzhou, a village in Guangdong province, after a mob formed a blockade on the road and began throwing explosives at officers. Three villagers were killed and eight were wounded, Xinhua said, quoting the Information Office of the neighboring city of Shanwei.
However, residents told The Associated Press that as many as 20 people were killed when police opened fire on a crowd of thousands protesting against inadequate compensation offered by the government for land to be used for the new power plant. Villagers said dozens of people were missing.
On Sunday, the village was under heavy guard by at least 100 riot police, some with shields and helmets. No weapons were visible. There was no violence, but villagers could be seen arguing angrily with police. Hundreds of police were stopping vehicles at roadblocks, checking for local men.
Government banners hung at the village entrance said, "Following the law is the responsibility and obligation of the people" and "Don't listen to rumors, don't let yourself be used." Another tried to placate local anger, promising, "The people's government will always support the people of Dongzhou."
Residents said earlier that families were pleading with police to return the bodies of slain loved ones.
There was no immediate way to reconcile the widely diverging claims of death tolls, but if the higher toll were confirmed, it would be the deadliest assault by Chinese security forces on civilians since the military killed protesters around Tiananmen Square in Beijing in 1989. Although police often use tear gas and truncheons to disperse demonstrators, it is extremely rare for them to fire into a crowd.
The clash in Dongzhou also marked an escalation in social protests that have convulsed the Chinese countryside over land seizures for factories, power plants, shopping malls and other projects. Farmers often say they are paid too little and some accuse officials of stealing compensation money.
Authorities called the assault by villagers "a serious violation of the law" and said a special group was formed to investigate the incident, Xinhua said.
Before the fatal attack, police used tear gas to break up a mob of about 170 villagers armed with knives, steel spears, sticks and explosives, Xinhua said. Two villagers were arrested.
The report said the instigators then formed a mob of 300 villagers to blockade a road leading to a neighboring village to force police to release the suspects. Police opened fire after the villagers began to throw explosives at police and one of the instigators threatened to blow up the power plant, Xinhua said.
Hong Kong's South China Morning Post newspaper Saturday quoted Dongzhou villagers as saying authorities were trying to cover up the killings by offering families money to give up the bodies of the dead.
"They offered us a sum but said we would have to give up the body," an unidentified relative of one slain villager, 31-year-old Wei Jin, was quoted as saying. "We are not going to agree."
Hong Kong reverted to Chinese control in 1997, but the former British colony maintains a high degree of press freedom. Its proximity to Dongzhou gives local reporters good access to events there.
Late Saturday, villagers said a tense standoff continued around Dongzhou as thousands of troops patrolled the perimeter, and frightened villagers either remained in their homes or argued with police over relatives' bodies.
"Many police are surrounding the village today," said one woman. "We are not permitted to leave the village."
One woman in the village told The Associated Press by telephone that police were holding some bodies of dead protesters and refusing relatives' pleas to give them back.
Another villager, who identified himself only by his last name, Chong, said many of the victims' families had gone to a local police station seeking compensation for the deaths but had been turned away.
None of the villagers wanted to be identified, fearing official retaliation.
Before Saturday's report, state media had not mentioned the incident in Dongzhou and both provincial and local governments repeatedly refused to comment. Telephone calls to the local police station went unanswered.
The number of protests in China's vast, poverty-stricken countryside — home to about 800 million people — has risen in recent months as anger comes to a head over land seizures, corruption and a yawning wealth gap that experts say now threatens social stability.
The government says about 70,000 such confrontations between officials and rural residents occurred last year, although many more are believed to go unreported. The clashes also have become increasingly violent.
Alarmed by such conflicts, PresidentHu Jintao's government has made a priority of easing rural poverty, promising to spread prosperity to areas left behind by China's economic boom. But in many regions, families still get by on the equivalent of a few hundred dollars a year.
Dongzhou is on the outskirts of the city of Shanwei. Like many cities in China, Shanwei has cleared suburban land once used for farming to build industrial zones. State media have said the Shanwei Red Bay industrial zone is slated to have three electricity-generating plants — a coal-fired plant, a wave power plant and a wind farm.
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Thanks, will post it.
Brian
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