Poonam Sharma
In the long and tumultuous history of China, Sichuan has frequently served as a warning bell — a province where trouble simmers before dynasties fall. There is an old saying that describes this: *”Before the nation descends into disorder, Sichuan is already in disarray; after the nation is at peace, Sichuan is the last to come to rest.”* The 1911 Sichuan Railway Protection Movement, which assisted in sparking the Xinhai Revolution and overthrowing the Qing Dynasty, is just one case in point.
Now, in 2025, history seems to be rolling over. In the city of Jiangyou, population around 730,000, a violent incident of school bullying has blown up into one of the most ferocious urban rebellions China has experienced in years under the Chinese Communist Party’sstrictly controlled surveillance state.
The Incident That Sparked a Movement
The ordeal of a 14-year-old girl, known here as Miss Lin, allegedly lured by three classmates aged 13 and 14, in which the girls forced her to strip and then verbally humiliated and viciously beat her for four hours, was recorded and released on social media and even stole her belongings.
Miss Lin is from a poor background — her mother is deaf and mute, her father a disabled peasant. Accounts state that she had been targeted previously by the same group, and there could have been others as well.
When the video started circulating on August 2, her parents demanded justice, appealing to school and government authorities, and eventually the police. But initial reactions were evasive. Online rumors circulated that one of the attackers’ parents was the deputy chief of the district police. Under pressure from the public, officials issued a statement saying that the victim had only suffered “minor injuries” and the attackers would only be transferred to another school and subjected to “criticism and education” sessions.
To the many Chinese, this was a common tale — pampered offspring of party-associated families avoiding actual punishment. But in Sichuan, silence was not possible this time.
A City Stands Up
In Jiangyou, indignation became action. Locals asserted: *”Her mother cannot speak — so we will.”* They congregated outside the school, protested with officials, and blockaded busy intersections. People thronged before the local government building, shouting, *”Tell the truth! Punish the attackers! We want justice!”*
The authorities, frightened, summoned reinforcements from other cities. The response was quick and savage. Police attacked protesters, arrested dozens, and used tear gas and pepper spray. The videos from the night depicted scenes of chaos — smoke hanging in the air, streets lined with police, and what some reported as shots fired.
The most appalling photo emanated from caged animal trucks, which are usually employed to haul pigs and cattle, hijacked to transport arrested protesters. One truck’s front was painted with the word “Liberation” — a cruel irony that further fueled public outrage.
From Local Outrage to National Defiance
This disturbance came only days before the World University Games were about to open in Chengdu, Sichuan’s capital city — a significant international meet China was hosting for the very first time. Authorities acted swiftly to censor any mention of Jiangyou in the internet. Netizens countered with code language; “soy sauce” — *jiang you* in Chinese, the homophone of the city’s name — became the shorthand for the protest. Before long, even “soy sauce” was off-limits.
Even after being censored, the movement started resonating across Sichuan. The people elsewhere also showed solidarity, perceiving in Jiangyou a rare demonstration of mass guts. Among the viral comments was: *”History will remember the bravery of the people of Sichuan. The revolution to overthrow the CCP has already begun.”*
Calls for Nationwide Action
In the midst of the unrest, open letters and posters started spreading online, calling for an organized, nonviolent national movement. One poster invited Chinese citizens to participate in a symbolic protest on August 9 from 6 to 8 PM — “buy some soy sauce,” stroll around public areas, and demonstrate solidarity.
An open letter called *”For Justice, For the Future”* directly appealed to Jiangyou citizens, characterizing their plight as a “combination of legal injustice, social breakdown, and administrative failure.” It called for daily rallies in front of City Hall, nonviolent occupation of businesses associated with the culprits, and “hacking the prisons” — flooding detention facilities with mass arrests in order to compel governmental action.
The note demanded lawyers to represent detainees, social media movements to be vocal, and education and judiciary reforms in the long term to safeguard children. The appeal ended in a call to action: *”The wails of that 14-year-old girl are not only our shame; they are an alarm bell. Let’s pursue justice in non-violence and leave a roadmap for the future.”*
Why This Matters
This is the first time in years that ordinary Chinese citizens have organized so openly and autonomously against the state. In a political climate where dissent is swiftly crushed, Jiangyou’s uprising represents a rare breach in the wall of fear.
The symbolism is powerful. As the 1911 Railway Protection Movement contributed to the end of imperial rule, this protest — rooted in local injustice — might fuel wider resistance to authoritarianism. It also offers evidence of intense aggravation with system privilege and corruption, where officials’ children are inviolable.
Whether Jiangyou turns the corner has much to do with how extensive the solidarity movement becomes and what the state does in response. The CCP weathered local protests in the past by containing them, but if “soy sauce” solidarity movements break out in several cities, the challenge to the regime potentially becomes many times larger.
For now, Jiangyou’s streets have fallen quiet under heavy police presence. But the memory of caged trucks, tear gas, and chants against Xi Jinping lingers — not just in Sichuan, but across the Chinese internet.
History has shown that revolutions are not one act but the buildup of grievances, sparks, and acts of rebellion. Jiangyou could be such a spark. And in the province of record for rising first when empires crumble, that is potentially more than the powers-that-be want to acknowledge.