Direct Translation
☠️Malicious incidents erupt across China ⚡️Panic has begun within the country
—News: The escalating violence in China has triggered panic and strict censorship within the political and legal system
Editor : Zhongkang / Source: Epoch Times / https://www.aboluowang.com/2026/0422/2375049.html / Image : On 29 March 2026, a bulldozer rammed into a crowd at the Da Han Ji market in Fangshan District, Beijing. (Screenshot from video)

Recently, indiscriminate attacks have been reported in multiple locations across mainland China. Sources within the CCP regime disclosed to The Epoch Times that hundreds of similar attacks occur daily, but most are not publicly disclosed. This has attracted the attention of the CCP's top leadership and the political and legal system, which has internally instructed local authorities to strengthen investigations and control, and strictly restrict the dissemination of related information online.
Vicious acts of revenge against society continue to occur across mainland China, and are escalating. Wei Fang, an informed source within the system, revealed to The Epoch Times that recent sudden attacks are spreading across various regions. Wei Fang stated, "According to internal information, hundreds of knife attacks occur daily across mainland China, including dozens of serious random attacks each day, but these details have never been made public."
Wei Fang also revealed that the CCP's Political and Legal Affairs Commission and the Ministry of Public Security have jointly issued an internal notice requiring local public security organs to immediately conduct investigations, comprehensively reviewing petitioner groups, long-standing grievances, and various potential conflict cases, with particular emphasis on residents "with grievances and extreme tendencies."
Car rammed into crowd in Fujian
On 19 April 2026, a car rammed into a crowd in Shuitou Town, Nan'an City, Fujian Province. According to local official reports, two people died and one was injured; the perpetrator has been apprehended. However, eyewitnesses told reporters that the actual casualties may be higher than the official figures, stating, "I saw at least four people who showed no signs of life at the scene."
A video circulating online shows a white sedan speeding through an intersection before suddenly turning left, ramming into the oncoming lane with almost no slowing down, destroying the central median, and impacting several motorcycles. An eyewitness said, "The car just kept crashing through; it didn't look like it was out of control, more like it was intentionally ramming people."
Local residents told reporters that the scene was quickly cleared, and related videos and discussions disappeared rapidly from online platforms. A Fujian netizen said that such incidents have become sensitive in social media groups, "Just sharing it might get you in trouble; some people have been summoned for questioning, others have been questioned," leading many to switch to posting information on overseas platforms to avoid censorship.
Information related to the Beijing Fangshan hit-and-run case is blocked
On 29 March 2026, in Fangshan District, Beijing, a man of about 50 years old from Liaoning drove a heavy bulldozer through the checkpoint of a traditional rural market in Dahanji Village, Zhoukoudian Town, recklessly driving through the crowded streets and indiscriminately running over stalls and people. The scene was horrific, with many vendors and passersby covered in blood.
Some eyewitnesses claimed to have seen 7 to 8 people dead, while other social media rumours suggested the death toll was as high as 13, with about 12 injured.
However, the authorities have not released specific information and have blocked the news. A netizen reported on overseas social media that he was summoned by police after discussing the incident in a WeChat group.
Other attacks have also been reported in multiple other locations. On March 26, a knife attack occurred on Dongmen Pedestrian Street in Luohu District, Shenzhen, Guangdong; on March 31, a similar incident occurred on Qingsong Road in Wuhan, Hubei; on April 4, a man in Shenyang, Liaoning, randomly attacked people before jumping to his death. Specific details regarding casualties in these incidents have not been fully disclosed.
The CCP emphasizes information censorship
Mr. Pan, a retired civil servant in Shenzhen, revealed that the recent surge in retaliatory attacks has prompted strong accountability from the CCP's political and legal system. He said, "Higher-level departments believe that local governments have failed to effectively fulfill their responsibilities and are slow to respond in handling grassroots conflicts, bearing an unshirkable responsibility. Under immense pressure to hold them accountable, the focus of local political and legal units has shifted. An internal notice explicitly requires strict prevention of sensitive videos or inside information from leaking to overseas platforms."
Li Youliang (pseudonym), a scholar residing in Europe, said in an interview that the recent series of extreme incidents in many parts of China are a concentrated release of long-term accumulated social pressure: "Under the CCP's authoritarian system, local officials are driven by the pursuit of wealth and lack a response to the needs of the grassroots. This structural imbalance is pushing the lower classes to their limits, leading to a significant increase in individual acts of revenge against society."
Li Youliang said that historically, such changes follow a clear trajectory; the upheavals of past dynasties often began with scattered individual protests, gradually evolving into a wider-ranging impact.
He believes that the CCP authorities' current response remains stuck in the logic of maintaining stability, focusing on screening people and tightening control over public opinion, while avoiding the systemic causes. If the root of the problem continues to be suppressed, relying solely on control and repression will not stop these incidents; they will only continue to accumulate and recur.
—Original title: Insider: Hundreds of attacks daily in Mainland China shake the political and legal System
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