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Prisoners die in Chinese mines: an indictment of "reform
through labour"
By John Chan
20 June 2001
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In the six weeks from April 1 to May 18, at least 592 men lost
their lives in 66 separate mine disasters in southern China. Ninety
of these deaths took place in four accidents on May 18.
The Beijing Morning Post reported that a roof collapse
on that day at a small gypsum mine at Beihai, in the province
of Guangxi, had trapped 29 miners 200 metres underground. A rescue
operation over the following four days failed to find either bodies
or survivors, leading authorities to presume all the workers had
died. The China Daily reported that another 12 miners had
been killed on the same day by gas explosions in two Sichuan province
coal mines.
The worst disaster on May 18 occurred at a remote coal mine
in Qinglongzui, near the city of Chengdu in Sichuan. A sudden
flood trapped thirty-nine men. The men, however, were not paid
employees, but, in the words of a government official, convicted
criminals.
The official, from the Sichuan Security Supervision Bureau,
told press agencies: There is little hope that they are
alive. They may have drowned immediately when water poured into
the pit. Rescue workers attempting to drain the pit could
not find the source of the water still flowing into the mine.
Three days later, rescue efforts were abandoned and the 39 prisoners
declared dead.
According to reports by Agence France Presse and Deutsche
Press-Agentur, 19 prisoners were also killed last November
when another Sichuan coal mine flooded. The reports quoted a provincial
government official describing the mine as a base to educate
prisoners incarcerated at the Fengcheng Prison. The official
admitted that a local mining company paid the prison a fee for
the use of the labour.
The death of dozens of prisoners hired out to businessmen and
sent hundreds of metres underground to mine coal in poorly constructed
and badly ventilated shafts testifies to the barbaric character
of the system of reform through labour or laogai
in force across China. It has nothing to do with reform,
but is a form of slave labour.
Article 41 of the Chinese Criminal Code states that anyone
sentenced for a crime and is able to work, shall undergo
reform through labour. The US-based Laogai Research Foundation
estimates that there are at least 1,100 reform through labour
institutions in China, with up to 6.8 million inmates.
A percentage of those performing forced labour, however, have
not been convicted of any crime. Under Chinas legal system,
police agencies have the administrative power to impose terms
of up to three years of re-education through labour,
or laojiao, without any judicial procedure. Those sentenced
have neither right to defence counsel nor any right of appeal.
Reminiscent of Englands Poor Laws during
the 18th and 19th centuries, the police can condemn a Chinese
citizen to laojiao for not engaging in honest pursuits
and being able-bodied but refusing to work.
Such powers are used arbitrarily against rural migrants without
proper residency permits, the homeless, suspected prostitutes
or drug users and political opponents of the regime. According
to the New York-based Human Rights in China, some 260,000 people
were being held in December 2000 for re-education.
Even after a sentence has been served, there is no guarantee
an individual will be released. A law adopted at the 1981 National
Peoples Congress decrees that both convicts and laojiao
inmates who have served their sentences but who have not
reformed fully are to be kept in the camps for job placement
or jiuye.
Most recently the Falun Gong religious movement, which was
officially declared an evil cult and banned in July 1999, has
been targetted. The Falun Gong claims that up to 10,000 adherents
who refused to renounce their beliefs have been sentenced by local
police to between one and three years of laojiao.
A Falun Gong press release on May 30 denounced a recent stage-managed
tour for foreign journalists of the Masanjia camp where some of
its adherents are interned. The media was presented with a clean,
freshly-painted building where former Falun Gong practitioners
enthusiastically watched re-education programsin
English with Chinese subtitlesoutlining the dangers of religious
cults.
However, Falun Gong members formerly interned in camps and
now residing in Canada and the US have testified they were forced
to assemble toys, plastic flowers and other export products. The
press release declared that the reality of life for prisoners
was hard labour, rotten food and soiled water, unsanitary
and overcrowded living space and financial extortion of themselves
and their families.
The Washington Post last week reported on conditions
at the Hunan Special Electrical Machine Factory, or the Hunan
Province No. 1 Prison, which holds between 2,000 to 3,000 prisoners,
including at least 50 political dissidents.
According to inmates, they are forced to work 12-16 hours a
day, sometimes seven days a week. The prison used to produce industrial
generators but can no longer compete against its more efficient
rivals and now uses its captive labour to manufacture wigs, medicine
boxes, gloves and Christmas lights.
Zhang Shanguang was imprisoned from 1989 to 1996 for his role
in the 1989 anti-government upsurge. He was re-arrested in 1998
for attempting to form an association of laid-off workers and
sentenced to re-education.
In a petition authored by Zhang and smuggled out to the Human
Rights in China group, he explains: On some occasions inmates
work throughout the night without sleep. Its very common
to see inmates spitting blood and fainting from exhaustion...
Unless someone is clearly dying, inmates hardly ever get proper
medical attention.
Prison labour plays a minor but nevertheless considerable role
in the Chinese economy. In 1999, analysts Dun and Bradstreet estimated
that 99 known laogai campsjust 9 percent of the totalhad
total annual sales of $842.7 million. Prison labour is involved
in everything from the manufacture of spring clips to mining,
both for the domestic market and for export.
To disguise the fact that businesses associated with prisons
are using forced labour, the camps are given a corporate name.
Hangzhou Wulin Machine Works, for example, is one
of the public names of Zhejian Province No. 4 Prison.
The camps are responsible for financing up to 70 percent of
their expenses out of their business activities, including paying
the salaries of prison staff. As well, many have accumulated large
debts and are generally inefficient. This has encouraged the increasingly
ruthless exploitation of prisoners, such as contracting them to
work in coal mineswith the inevitable tragic results.
See Also:
Chinese think-tank warns of growing unrest
over social inequality
[15 June 2001]
Chinese authorities
commit workers' leader to psychiatric hospital to halt protests
[30 December 2000]
Underground explosion
adds to China's appalling death toll in coal mines
[6 October 2000]
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