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WSWS : News
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Two Chinese workers sentenced to harsh prison terms
By John Chan
14 May 2003
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Four months after their trial on charges of subversion
of state power, two Chinese workers leadersYao
Fuxin and Xiao Yunlianghave been sentenced to seven and
four years in jail, respectively, by a court in the city of Liaoyang.
Yao and Xiao were arrested after helping to organise demonstrations
of laid-off workers in Liaoyang in northeast China in March 2002.
As many as 30,000 workers took part in peaceful rallies to demand
financial aid and the prosecution of corrupt officials.
The harsh sentences handed down on May 9 were clearly aimed
at deterring other workers from staging protests over Chinas
rising job losses and deteriorating living conditions.
At the initial trial in January, hundreds of workers defied
police intimidation and held a demonstration in support of the
two leaders outside the local public court. Last Fridays
proceedings were held under even tighter security. The hearing
took place not in a courtroom, but at the police detention centre
where the two workers have been held for more than a year.
According to Hong Kong-based China Labour Bulletin,
only the two daughters of Yao and Xiao were allowed to enter the
detention centre. Outside several hundred anti-riot security officers
were mobilised to guard the building, as at least 300 local workers
turned up to demonstrate their solidarity with the two leaders.
Their defence lawyer, Mo Shaoping, was unable to attend the
hearing. Just four days before the hearing, he was suddenly served
with a notice to undergo a compulsory quarantine of 10 days as
a suspected carrier of serious acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).
The state press agency Xinhua claimed that two workers had
been guilty of attempting to establish a local branch of the banned
China Democracy Party in the city of Liaoyang. Yao and Xiao were
also accused of having spread rumours and instigated local
people to break into the Liaoyang City government departments,
seriously disturbing their normal work order.
The allegations are absurd. The China Democracy Party was all
but destroyed when authorities illegalised the organisation and
rounded up its leading members in 1998. Despite this, last years
demonstrations by unemployed workers in Liaoyang were declared
to be part of a political conspiracy by the China Democracy Party
to overthrow the government.
Yaos daughter, Yao Dan, told the New York Times
that the legal proceedings took less than an hour and that the
prosecutors charges were simply accepted by the court. The
verdicts are totally wrong and unfair. Both men set out not to
harm society or the state but to speak for workers and secure
their entitlements. Were not the ones who should be on trial,
it should be those corrupt officials, she said.
Xiaos wife condemned the charges as trumped up
and declared: We cant accept the verdict.
Both of the convicted workers are middle-aged and suffer serious
health problems. Yao has been hospitalised twice for a stroke.
Xiao has cataracts and his eyesight is so poor that he was unable
to recognise family members. Their health has already deteriorated
after a year in jail and will worsen further if they are compelled
to serve their full terms.
Police intimidation continued even after the proceedings. The
China Labour Bulletin reported: Immediately after
the hearing Yao Dan and Xiao Yun (the two daughters) were both
driven away in separate police cars. Xiao Yunliangs wife,
Su Anhua, tried to stop the car taking her daughter away but was
beaten to the ground by police. She lost consciousness and was
taken to hospital. She was later taken home by her elder daughter
after the hospital asked for money for the medical treatment.
The two daughters were later released.
The Liaoyang Intermediate Peoples Court and police were
undoubtedly acting on instruction from the top Chinese leadership.
Last years demonstrations of tens of thousands of unemployed
workers were among the countrys largest and clearly shocked
the Stalinist bureaucracy, which is acutely sensitive to any sign
of unrest.
Beijings pro-capitalist policies have resulted in the
retrenchment of millions of workers as state-owned enterprises
have been restructured and either sold off or shut down altogether.
Sacked workers also have also lost their access to any the social
benefits that were in the past provided by state-owned companies.
The resulting destitution has sparked widespread, though often
small and isolated, protests.
The fear in Beijing is that such unrest could coalesce into
a broad anti-government movement. A state-run magazine Public
Security Research warned last year: As the market economy
has developed, mass incidents are constantly occurring and they
are characterised by high levels of organisation, dramatic impact
and major disturbances of society.
The outbreak of SARS has heightened the nervousness in the
Chinese leadership. The epidemic is already threatening foreign
investment and exports. Any expressions of social instability
could lead to a further downturn in investment and compound the
political, economic and social problems facing Beijing.
The State Planning Development Commission recently revised
its estimate for this years jobless rate from 4 percent
up to 4.5 percent as a result of SARS. The actual figure is almost
certainly higher. The Ministry of Labour and Social Security,
which defines unemployment as anyone who cannot earn more
than the basic living allowance provided by local government,
estimates joblessness at between 8 to 10 percentexcluding
120 million rural workers who are categorised as surplus
labour.
Chinese authorities have already exploited the SARS epidemic
to bolster the police presence on the streets and to introduced
tough new restrictions on basic democratic rights. Four people
have been jailed for using the Internet to spread harmful
rumours causing social panic, undermining the fight against the
spread of disease and destroying social order. Another 107
people have been arrested for doing the same by mobile phone.
These draconian measures are designed to forestall unrest and
to send a message to foreign investors that Beijing has the situation
under control.
The treatment meted out to Yao Fuxin and Xiao Yunliang serves
a similar purpose. They were jailed not because they were involved
in any subversion of the state, but to demonstrate
to international financial circles that the Chinese bureaucracy
will not tolerate any opposition from below that threatens to
disrupt the operation of the capitalist market and foreign investment.
See Also:
Two Chinese workers tried
for subversion over protests
[23 January 2003]
Workers' protests
continue in northeast China
[25 May 2002]
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]
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