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Beijing to prosecute leaders of workers protests
By John Chan
20 April 2002
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Five leaders of last months demonstrations in Chinas
northern city of Liaoyang, the capital of Liaoning province, have
been formally charged and will soon face trial. The arrested workers
are Yao Fuxin, Xiao Yunliang, Pang Qingxiang, Wang Zhaoming and
Gu Baoshu. All are former employees of the bankrupted state-owned
Liaoyang Ferro-alloy Factory. The first four were detained by
police during protests by up to 30,000 laid-off workers to demand
unpaid wages and benefits and denounce official corruption. Gu
Baoshu was seized this week, according to a press release by the
Hong Kong-based China Labour Bulletin.
Reuters reported that on March 31, local police sent
the families of the first four a notice that the suspects
had committed crimes of illegal gathering and demonstration.
According to article 296 of Chinas crime code, the charge
of illegal gathering and demonstration can carry a
sentence up to five years jail. While the police have refused
to specify any date for their trial, they are being detained in
Tieling, a city nearly 100 kilometres from Liaoyang.
The main leader of the Liaoyang workers, 52-year-old metal
worker Yao Fuxin, was reportedly hospitalised with heart problems
and high blood pressure on March 25. But his wife, Guo Xiujing,
told the international press that he was well when he was detained
12 days before, and that he had no medical history of heart disease.
Though the police promised effective treatment of
Yao, Guo Xiujing was denied the right to see her husband until
April 11, nearly a month after his arrest.
Last months Liaoyang demonstrations broke out on March
11 when the city mayor, Gong Shangwu, told reporters that there
is no unemployment in his city. In an area where thousands
of workers have been laid-off by state-owned companies and live
in poverty, the remark triggered widespread outrage. Following
the example of workers in the Daqing oilfields to the north, who
were staging daily protests over their conditions, workers from
as many as 20 bankrupt factories in Liaoyang began marches on
the city offices.
The former workers of the Liaoyang Ferro-alloy Factory were
at the centre of the protests. The plant was bankrupted last November
but it had not paid its 5,000 staff for two years. The local government
guaranteed a pension of $22 a month, but, as was the case with
workers laid off from other city factories, the money was not
being paid. A former textile worker told the Washington Post
on March 23: All of us have totally lost faith in the government.
When people saw Gong lie on TV, we were ready to explode.
The demonstrations in Liaoyang were brought to an end in late
March by a combination of concessions and police repression. The
US-based China Labor Watch has reported that the Liaoyang local
authorities promised to pay laid-off workers a pension of $60
and provide them free health care. They guaranteed there would
be no charges laid against arrested workers and promised to investigate
workers allegations of corruption. The provincial government
also announced a temporary suspension of plans to merge Liaoning
provinces four largest steel plants and list the company
on international stock exchanges. The merger is expected to lead
to the redundancy of one third of the 200,000-strong workforce
under conditions where unemployment in Liaoning is already over
25 percent.
At the same time, however, hundreds of paramilitary police
were deployed in the city. The authorities appear intent on imposing
prison sentences on the five leaders, in an attempt to intimidate
the working class from engaging in future actions.
Large-scale demonstrations by redundant workers are continuing
to break out in the other part of the country however. On April
8, 1,000 workers laid off from the state-owned Guiyang Steel Factory
in the south eastern province of Guizhou blocked two roads to
protests over their low unemployment benefits. With only
150 yuan ($18) per month, how could they live and what choice
do they have? I can only make 400 to 500 yuan ($48-$60) a month,
which is enough to raise only one person. What about my family?
one worker said.
On the same day, a violent clash took place between workers
and factory security guards in Dongguan, a free trade zone city
in Chinas major export province of Guangdong. Over 1,500
workers sacked by a bankrupt Hong Kong-based toy companyproducing
toys for transnational corporations like Mattel, MGA Entertainment
and Wal-Martdemonstrated outside the plant to demand the
payment of outstanding wages. According to China Labor Watch,
the workers were predominantly rural migrants and worked
19 hours a day, seven days a week, with dangerous chemicals, for
less than 20 cents an hour.
Underlying the unrest is the immense social inequality and
deprivation in China. A recent survey of the living conditions
of the urban poor in Chinas capital Beijing found that 50,000
families live on less than $US110 per month, while another 37,500
families somehow survived on less than $US60 per month. Tang Jun,
a specialist in urban poverty with the Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences, told the Singapore Straits Times on April 1:
They are Chinas new poor, the result of the massive
layoffs in recent years. The urban poor came about when state-owned
enterprises began their reforms. It is estimated that more
than 40 million state-sector workers have been laid-off since
1997. Even CASS, a government-controlled institution, estimates
that 25 million urban Chinese live on subsistence wages.
The working class unrest in north-eastern China has been widely
commented on. Workers besieging government buildings, blocking
roads, forming organisations and clashing with the police, are
being noted in international financial circles as signs that the
Chinese regime is failing to prevent the emergence of a militant
labour movement.
Hu Angang, an academic with CASS, told Business Week
on April 8 that the workers protests were the Number
one challenge for Chinas next generation of leaders. No
country in the world has ever cut so many jobs before. Hu
estimated that with Chinas entry into the World Trade Organisation
(WTO), another 10 million industrial workers will be laid-off
annually.
The New York Times remarked on April 14: The apparent
quiet suggests how effective the government has quelled the protests
with its usual strategya few arrests, a ban on news reports
and quick concessions to the majority of workers. The response
averted a runaway pandemic of protests. The stability, the
paper warned, was only short-term, however, as Beijings
actions were generating widespread contempt for the Communist
Party, a spreading realisation that protests can bring results
and did not address the continued feelings of vulnerability
among millions of idle workers.
In its April 8 issue, Business Week devoted an editorial
to Why Beijing must satisfy workers. Without
the safety valve of political participation, worker dissatisfaction
is going to be aimed directly at the government, with potentially
explosive results, the magazine declared. The comment is
a blunt warning to Beijing that, unless the situation is brought
under control, the billions of dollars that have poured into the
country to take advantage of a regimented, low-wage workforce
will just as easily flood out.
See Also:
A letter from a Chinese reader
on workers' protests
[29 March 2002]
Working class demonstrations
spread in northern China
[23 March 2002]
Chinese think-tank
warns of growing unrest over social inequality
[15 June 2001]
Ten years since the
Tiananmen Square massacre
Political lessons for the working class
[4 June 1999]
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