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WSWS : News
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: China
Mass protests in China point to sharp social tensions
By John Chan
1 November 2004
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A wave of militant urban protests has erupted in China over
the past month against official corruption, social inequality
and the destruction of jobs.
On October 18, the brutal assault of a worker by a government
official sparked a riot in Wangzhou, a city in the southwestern
province of Sichuan. According to some estimates, up to 80,000
workers and unemployed were involved in a night of clashes and
confrontations with thousands of police. Paramilitary units were
eventually called in from neighbouring cities to restore order.
The incident that provoked the unrest is a graphic example
of the contempt Chinas state bureaucracy and capitalist
elite has for the working classespecially the millions of
so-called migrant workers who have moved from the countryside
to the cities in search of jobs.
According to accounts on the Internet, a worker, weighed down
with a load of goods across his back, accidentally bumped into
the wife of a local taxation bureau director. As he attempted
to apologise, the official knocked him to the ground. In front
of dozens of stunned onlookers, the official beat the man with
a pole, breaking his leg. With the worker lying in agony, the
official then proceeded to boast to the crowd that he could have
him killed if he wanted. At one point, he offered spectators 20
yuan if they would slap the injured mans face.
Police, who arrived as the assault was unfolding, shook hands
with the official and made clear he would not be arrested. Outraged
workers attempted to detain the bureaucrat but he was secreted
away by the police.
News of the incident spread quickly throughout the citys
working class districts. By late afternoon, tens of thousands
of local residents had rallied outside the Wangzhou city government
offices, chanting hand over the attackers, punish
the attackers and for justice of the injured.
Workers pelted the riot police protecting the building with
rocks and smashed the glass entrance. Police cars were set ablaze.
According to the Asia Times: The character of the
demonstration changed from a fight for justice to the expression
of anger to the government. As night fell, thousands of
police and paramilitary personnel were deployed to restore order,
firing tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse the demonstration.
Street battles continued until midnight.
The Chinese government attempted to downplay the incident,
telling the media that a misunderstanding had caused
the revolt and that the disturbances only involved a few
illegal elements. The underlying causes of the riot, however,
are obvious.
Some 250,000 people who were evicted from their villages to
make way for the Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze River were forcibly
relocated to the area, which already had high unemployment. Many
of the migrants have been unable to find jobs and are forced to
live on a 70-80 yuan monthly living allowance ($US9-10)
paid by the government. This payment for the Three Gorges refugees,
however, is scheduled to finish in 2005. On top of the poverty
and deprivation, the displaced villagers are treated with contempt
by the state bureaucracy and subjected to police harassment. The
simmering tensions eventually expressed themselves in an explosive
fashion.
Broader unrest
Discontent has erupted in other Chinese industrial cities this
month. The reported protests, however, are likely to be the tip
of the iceberg.
According to Associated Press, 5,000 retirees from a major
state-owned textile factory, many of them women, protested in
Bengbu city, in eastern Anhui province on October 22, to demand
an increase in the poverty-level pension. Thousands of sympathisers
joined them in the streets, forming a kilometre-long demonstration
that blocked all traffic into the city. Riot police were initially
deployed but they were withdrawn out of government concerns that
any repression would trigger a Wangzhou-style riot. Several officials
who mistakenly entered the protest area abandoned their cars and
fled on foot, fearing that workers would attack them.
The retired workers only receive a monthly pension of 400-500
yuan ($US50-60). With inflation running at a seven-year high of
5.2 percent, they cannot make ends meet. In addition, many of
the retirees have serious work-related injuries or medical conditions.
Conditions in Chinas textile factories are so bad they are
commonly referred to as coal mines on the surface.
Every year thousands of miners and textile workers are killed
or maimed in industrial accidents.
The demonstration was organised in the hope that Chinese premier
Wen Jiabao, who was rumoured to be attending the opening ceremony
of a local market, would listen to their demands. Instead of receiving
sympathy, however, a number of the retirees were arrested as they
distributed leaflets outlining their grievances.
On October 18, hundreds of employees from the state-owned Jining
Department Store protested in Jining City in eastern Shangdong
province against the low wages and extended hours they are being
forced to work after the company was restructured. As in Bengbu,
thousands of other workers joined the demonstration in solidarity
with their demands.
Nearly 7,000 workers from the state-owned Tianwang Textile
Factory in Xianyang city, Shaanxi province, have occupied the
factory since September 14 in protest against the takeover of
the company by the Hong Kong based China Resources.
The company sacked the entire workforce and demanded all future
employees sign a new contract on lower wages. The workers were
also forced to sell their shares in the firm to the new owners.
The occupation has received mass support in the area. On September
18, 1,000 police sent to evict the occupying workers were driven
back by a crowd of thousands of people who rallied outside the
factory. Protestors sang the Internationale and other revolutionary
songs.
On September 13, 1,000 employees from Shaanxi Precision Alloy
held a four-day traffic blockade to protest the privatisation
of the state-owned company. Workers demanded an investigation
into missing assets and raised banners such as defend state-owned
assets to death, children want school, elders want
food, we want wages, we want our fruits of labour
back and break the control of ideas.
Government officials have responded to each of these incidents
with worthless assurances that the workers grievances would
be given attention. But the reality is that the Beijing Stalinist
regime, in line with its commitments to the World Trade Organisation,
is accelerating free market restructuring throughout China.
The shutdown and privatisation of state-owned enterprises in
1990s wiped out millions of jobs, and eliminated subsidised housing,
pensions and health care. The new leadership of President Hu Jintao
has announced a firesale of the remaining 190,000 state-owned
enterprises, with only 190 companies remaining in government hands.
The growing working class protests are in direct response to
this policy. Robin Munro, research director of the Hong Kong-based
China Labour Bulletin, told Bloomberg News on October
26: Protests like these [the recent incidents] are happening
all over. We expect many, many more as the wave of privatisation
of state-owned companies takes off.
Class tensions are also intensifying in coastal province export
zones, where foreign firms brutally exploit tens of millions of
Chinese workers. With prices for oil and raw materials soaring
in recent months, thousands of sweatshops in these areas are demanding
that workers accept lower pay and longer hours in order to maintain
profit margins.
On October 10, 3,000 workers from a Hong Kong-based electronic
factory producing CDs in the Shenzhen Special Economic Zone in
Guangdong province protested on the main highway over their low
wages, disrupting city traffic for four hours. The company pays
as little as 230 yuan ($US26) a month for 12-hour working days,
compared to the official minimum wage of 610 yuan. Two young female
workers and five supporters were arrested.
Five thousand striking employees in Dongguan, another major
Guangdong manufacturing city, clashed with 500 anti-riot police
officers on October 6. The strike was over substandard food served
to workers in the Japanese-owned printing factory. Dozens of workers
were arrested or injured and a police car destroyed.
The growing class tensions underscore the reasons for the transfer
of control of the Chinese military from former president Jiang
Zemin to Hu Jintao at last months Communist Party central
committee plenum. The new leadership is dependent on the armed
forces to deal with social unrest.
Calls are being made in Chinese ruling circles for a build-up
of paramilitary and police numbers. In an interview with state-controlled
China Central Television on October 17, Public Security Minister
Zhou Yongkang declared that police numbers were insufficient
and could not win where demonstrators vastly outnumbered
them.
Beijings greatest fear is the massive growth of the Chinese
working class, both numerically and in terms of its social weight,
over the past two decades. The regime has 1.7 million police,
one million paramilitary police and two million troops in the
Peoples Liberation Army, to control a population of 1.4 billion.
More than 110 Chinese cities now have over one million residents.
Workers leaders continue to be targeted for arrest in
an attempt to intimidate the population. The most recent detentions
involve two female workers, Liu Meifeng and Ding Xiulan, from
a former state-owned Funing County Textile Factory in Jiangsu
Province. After leading 3,000 workers in a month-long struggle
against layoffs, women were seized on October 20 at a public meeting
organised by the government in Yancheng city. They have been charged
with disturbing the social ordera political
crime that carries lengthy prison terms.
See Also:
Behind the military leadership
changeover in China
[25 October 2004]
Hundreds of police break up
factory occupation in China
[13 September 2004]
Chinese capitalism:
industrial powerhouse or sweatshop of the world?
[31 January 2004]
Beijing's WTO concessions
signal a new stage in China's capitalist restructuring
[28 June 2000]
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