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WSWS : News
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: China
Chinese authorities commit workers' leader to psychiatric
hospital to halt protests
By Terry Cook
30 December 2000
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In a transparent attempt to stamp out a protracted protest
by workers at the Fuming County Silk Factory in China's eastern
Jiangsu province, management and public security officials arrested
one of the leaders, Cao Maobing, on December 15 and committed
him to a psychiatric hospital.
Officials claimed that Cao, a 47-year-old electrician, had
been diagnosed in 1998 with a psychiatric disorder but they have
not produced any evidence of mental illness. Significantly, Cao's
detention came only a day after he spoke to the international
media about the dispute over unpaid entitlements and the right
to form a trade union.
Cao accused management and local government officials of corruption,
claiming they had contributed to the factory's financial difficulties.
He said that in the mid-1990s management had asked employees to
each invest $US250 in the company to prop it up. Even though 3,000
workers invested, stock was never issued and the factory, which
is owned by the county authority, is still in financial straits.
Following Cao's arrest, his co-workers released a statement
denouncing the detention as political persecution.
Chinese workers have not shared in the fruits of economic
development and some have found it hard to survive. The official
trade union of China has not spoken for workers, it said.
Attempts by Cao's wife and relatives to obtain his release
have so far failed. Authorities at the mental institution in Yancheng
City, where he is being held, now claim to have complied with
the family's demand to stop trying to forcibly administer drugs
to Cao.
Over the last year, more than half of the factory's workforce
has been put on indefinite leave. The laid-off workers were supposed
to receive about $US20 a month in subsistence subsidy but the
payments stopped in June. Management has refused to pay proper
pensions, saying there is no money. Some employees are also owed
up to six months in back wages.
The local branch of the government-controlled trade union,
the All-China Federation of Trade Unions, fobbed off requests
for help with promises that something would be worked out.
So Cao and his co-workers went on strike on November 11 demanding
the payment of all monies. Delegations were sent to the provincial
capital Nanjing and to Beijing to confront government authorities.
A petition was also sent to the union federation demanding
it accept the formation of an alternative union at the plant.
On November 31, after the federation leadership refused the request,
the silk workers picketed the local headquarters chanting, We
demand the right to elect our own leaders.
Following the protests, the management paid several months
of entitlements but nothing else. The authorities were particularly
hostile to the demand for an independent union which has never
been tolerated by Beijing. Previous attempts to set up rival organisations
to the All-China Federation of Trade Unions have been ruthlessly
suppressed.
The Chinese authorities were clearly concerned that the protests
at Fuming Silk would spread to other factories in the province.
On November 30, more than 1,000 employees laid off from a fertiliser
plant surrounded the county government building, forcing authorities
to pay unpaid living allowances and pensions. Workers from a brewery
and a paper mill in Nanjing have threatened to organise similar
protests.
The bureaucracy moved swiftly to silence Cao even though he
had assured the government that he was not challenging the position
of the Communist Party or the government. In his December 14 radio
interview with the Voice of America, Cao said he was worried
that if the workers' real problems are not dealt with, the
situation will explode.
Beijing's economic reform program has already led
to the closure or privatisation of thousands of state-owned enterprises,
large and small, the loss of millions of jobs and the widespread
non-payment of wages, pensions and other entitlements.
Protests by workers are taking an increasingly militant and
defiant form, including the blockading of key rail lines and the
occupation of plants to prevent their closure. Demonstrations
and strikes have gone ahead in spite of government warnings and
police repression. Even the understated figures released by the
Ministry of Labor show that the number of labour disputes in China
has increased 14-fold over the eight years from 1992, with more
than 120,000 conflicts recorded this year.
See Also:
Beijing's WTO concessions signal
a new stage in China's capitalist restructuring
[28 June 2000]
Troops used to break up protests
by laid-off Chinese miners
[11 April 2000]
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