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WSWS : News
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: China
At least 11 dead in building collapse in southern China
By John Chan
8 December 2000
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At least 11 people were killed and 32 injured when a shopping
centre collapsed on December 1 in Chiling village located on the
outskirts of Dongguan, a densely populated industrial city neighbouring
the Shenzhen Special Economic Zone in southern China, just one
hour's drive from Hong Kong.
There are numerous reports in the Chinese media indicating
that the death toll is far higher than the official tally of 11.
China Central Television claimed that a man had been shown 11
bodies before identifying his relative. A building worker told
Yangcheng Evening News that of the 60 men working on the
site at the time, he saw only 20 escape. As well as the workers,
it is believed that at least 200 others were inside the building
when it caved in.
The South China Morning Post commented: The most
serious charge is that Dongguan officials covered up the number
killed in the accident, with some even alleging that dozens of
bodies still lie under the rubble.
Many workers in the areas around the Special Economic Zones
are migrants from the rural provinces and lack correct residency
papers, so it is unlikely the true number killed in Chiling will
ever be known.
Despite the number of people unaccounted for, Dongguan authorities
ordered cranes to level the centre within an hour of the collapse
that occurred around 2pm. By the end of the day, up to 10 cranes
were working on the site. The area was reopened to the public
just 24 hours after the collapse. One relative denounced the use
of heavy machinery as barbaric.
Authorities have offered compensation of 30,000 yuan ($US3,600)
to the families of the deceased, on the condition that they forfeit
their right to sue. Those injured were initially offered compensation
of 200 to 500 yuan ($US30-70), less than one month's average pay.
The collapse was directly caused by illegal construction of
two additional stories to the one-storey building, in order to
generate more rent for the local officials who controlled the
shopping centre. Investigators believe that the building's foundations,
which had been laid over a drainage ditch, subsided under the
extra weight. The construction had not been given official approval
and neither the architect nor the building contractor held licenses.
Four men have been detained over the disaster: the village
head of Chiling, building contractor Ye Manlin, architect Wu Xin
and labour contractor Huang Punshen.
The shopping centre was constructed 10 years ago with village
funds and on village land, so ownership ultimately belonged to
the village committee. In reality, as is the case throughout the
country, both the land and other collective property
was exploited by local Communist Party officials for their own
private gain.
Before the collapse, some 19 businessmen, mainly from Hong
Kong and Taiwan, leased the stores within the building, paying
a monthly rent of 1,000 yuan ($US120) directly to the Chiling
village head and his associates. In their pursuit of even greater
profits, the local officials started to add the extra stories
with complete disregard for elementary safety standards.
The building collapse at Chiling is just one tragic example
of the consequences of free market deregulation and foreign direct
investment in China over the last 20 years. Substantial segments
of the state bureaucracy have transformed themselves into capitalist
entrepreneurs and are seeking to amass wealth as rapidly as possible.
The process is most advanced in the southern provinces opposite
Hong Kong where Special Economic Zones like Shenzhen were established
to facilitate foreign investment. The anarchic growth in Shenzhen
and surrounding areas, which has transformed what was a small
fishing village in 1979 into an industrial and commercial city
of four million, has produced some of the deadliest results of
market reform in the country.
The limited building and safety regulations that exist are
routinely flouted. Tens of thousands of Chinese workers have been
killed or maimed in industrial accidents, fires or the collapse
of buildings and infrastructure. Just one week before the Chiling
disaster, another 19 people were injured in Shenzhen when a bridge
collapsed.
While Beijing regularly calls for the culprits in such cases
to be punished, the central government is responsible for, and
profits from, the free market policies that have put the accumulation
of wealth ahead of the most elementary requirements of working
people.
See Also:
A glimpse of the working conditions
being created by capitalism in China
[11 October 2000]
Underground explosion adds
to China's appalling death toll in coal mines
[6 October 2000]
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