In the field late at night, a tragedy quietly staged - Gaotang Village, Xinyi City, Xuzhou, Jiangsu Province, on the evening of December 20, a villager accidentally found during the patrol that a farmer brought more than 100 sheep into his leased 20 acres of wheat land. At this moment, the resentment in his heart was overflowing, and he conveyed the pain in his heart through multiple **, and strongly expressed his deep helplessness at the destruction of the 20 acres of wheat that he had invested in and worked so hard to plant.
Among those, the sheep poured into the fields like a tide, and the sheep neighed in the dark night, like a merciless catastrophe. In the picture, the figure of a husband and wife also appears, indifferently wandering among the eaten wheat fields. This makes one wonder if it is the ignorant sheep or the couple who are unaware of the hard work of the growersSuch a scene is like a painful picture shrouded in darkness, outlining the helplessness and bitterness in the middle of the night in the farmland.
After the incident, the villagers acted quickly and called the police for help. The Shuangtang Police Station of the Xinyi Municipal Public Security Bureau quickly intervened to investigate the tragedy in the drafting area. However, the reporter's attempts to send a private message to the villager for more details were in vain, perhaps because he was too immersed in the pain of the loss to face the outside world.
Seeking answers from the Bureau of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, we were told that the staff did not know anything about the matter. They made it clear that they were primarily responsible for dealing with agricultural accidents, which should fall under the category of civil disputes. They encouraged the parties to report to the police or file a lawsuit to seek compensation and offered to assist with the identification of damages. This seems to indicate that the matter may move into a more complex resolution process.
The end of the story has not yet been revealed, and the loss of 20 acres of wheat in this cold winter is not only a pain in the heart of a farmer, but also a hidden concern in rural farmland management. This is not just a plundering of wheat, but also a test for hard farmers. How to protect the rights and interests of individual farmers in agricultural production and how to achieve harmonious coexistence in this land are all difficult problems that need to be solved urgently. Perhaps this incident of wheat being eaten up is just the tip of the iceberg, and there are more problems and challenges hidden behind it, and we need to work together to find a more scientific and reasonable path for rural construction and agricultural management.