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Workers protests continue in northeast China
By John Chan
25 May 2002
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Despite the efforts of the central Beijing and local governments
to end the working class unrest in Chinas north eastern
provinces, laid-off workers in Liaoyang, Liaoning province, and
the Daqing oilfields in Heilongjiang province have organised protest
actions throughout May.
Hundreds of workers from the bankrupt Liaoyang Ferro-alloy
Factory have been gathering before the city government building
since May 3, to demand the release of their four arrested leadersYao
Fuxin, Xiao Yunliang, Pang Qingxiang and Wang Zhaomingand
a resolution of their grievances. The four were detained during
demonstrations of tens of thousands of workers in Liaoyang during
March, protesting against unemployment, unpaid wages and official
corruption.
Simmering tensions erupted when the mayor of Liaoyang told
journalists the city did not have any unemployment problems. Over
500,000 state sector workers were laid off in Liaoning province
last year and the vast majority are still owed a 10,000 yuan ($US1,200)
redundancy payout from their former employer. Most of the 6.8
million state sector workers in the province have only been paid
sporadically over the past two years and many of those laid off
are owed thousands of yuan in wages from companies that have been
bankrupted by the government.
The depth of the anger can be gauged by the fact that Ferro-alloy
workers have not abandoned their political demand for the release
of their representatives despite the payment of their outstanding
redundancy benefit in late March.
The Hong Kong-based China Labour Bulletin (CLB) reported that
on May 7 the Liaoyang local government had attempted to end the
silent rallies by asking the workers to appoint new representatives
to meet with the city mayor. The workers refused to do so, fearing
that the government was trying to identify other militants for
arrest. Instead, they issued an open letter to the mayor demanding
the release of the four leaders. It also called for a public report
on the forced bankruptcy of the citys state-owned factories,
an investigation into official corruption and the punishment of
police who had abused their positions. The letter warned that
unless the demands were met, collective demonstrations
would be organised in Beijing.
According to CLB sources, the city government rejected the
demands. On May 15 it ordered a police attack on workers after
they raised a banner denouncing the authorities. CLB reported:
More then 10 plainclothes police officers charged out of
the government buildings courtyard and attacked the workers
with punches and kicks and seized their banners. Clashes followed
as the workers protected the banners. During the clashes, the
son of a retired Ferro-alloy worker, whose mother was beaten during
the police assault, demanded to know why they had attacked his
mother. As a result, he was severely beaten by the police and
then taken away. Government officials later released the
man in order to calm other workers.
The protests continued over the following days, with Reuters
reporting on May 17 that a witness heard an official shouting
to a crowd of assembled workers outside the government offices:
The four will be sentenced soon, your action is useless.
Guo Xiujing, Yao Fuxins wife, told Reuters over the phone
that her house was under 24-hour surveillance and that police
had told workers not to come and talk to me. There
have been no reports from the city in the past week.
Alongside the renewed tensions in Liaoyang, as many as 10,000
laid-off workers in the Daqing oil fields are reported to have
been taking part in a series of new protests since May 1. PetroChina,
Chinas largest oil company and the owner of Daqing Petroleum,
attempted to slash the redundancy provisions for some 80,000 laid-off
employees in February in order to cut costs. The workers, mostly
in their 40s and 50s, responded with weeks of mass demonstrations.
As many as 60 workers were seized by police during the action
and some are still being held in detention.
The unrest among laid-off oil workers in Daqing has spread
to other oil fields. CLB reported on May 6 that some 60,000 redundant
and retired workers from the major Shengli Oilfield in northern
Hebei province, upon hearing news of the sustained struggle
of Daqing oilfield workers, are suing the Shengli Petroleum
Administration Bureau for outstanding pensions and benefits. The
workers have succeeded in having a local court file their case.
Chinese authorities are nervous about the potential for widespread
protests as large-scale layoffs continue. The governor of Liaoning
admitted on May 9 that another 500,000 [state industry]
workers would lose their jobs this year in the province
due to the free market restructuring of state-owned industries.
The current urban unemployment rate in the north-east is believed
to be over 25 percent in cities like Liaoyang and Shenyang.
See Also:
Beijing to prosecute leaders
of workers protests
[20 April 2002]
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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