The Telegraph (UK)

Sunday May 7, 2000

China's recession adds pressure for workers' rights

By Damien Mcelroy in Beijing

CHINA returns to work today after an unprecedented week-long national 
holiday ordered by a Communist leadership alarmed at escalating violent 
protests and strikes among a discontented workforce.

The decision to extend the "Labour Day" holiday to a week for 300 million 
urban workers seems to have been taken shortly before May 1st and had a 
whiff of panic about it. Analysts see it as a barely disguised attempt to 
defuse an increasingly explosive atmosphere among a workforce facing 
Western-style job insecurities combined with falling wages.

Fed up with not being paid by their bankrupt employers and fearful of being 
laid off, many workers are taking to the streets to challenge the 
leadership for a better deal. Above all, Beijing is terrified of a workers' 
rights movement emerging from the spread of isolated protests, and of China 
spawning the kind of Polish-style free trade union that helped topple 
communism in eastern Europe in the Eighties.

Unrest has been particularly prevalent in the provinces north-east of 
Beijing which have been hardest hit by the decline of old industries amid 
economic restructuring. Once in the vanguard of Mao Tse-dung dash for 
development, the region is now a basket case of outdated factories and 
exhausted mines.

In cities such as Shenyang, tens of thousands of laid-off factory workers 
wander the streets for want of something to do. They are easily prompted 
into reciting a litany of grievances. A recent flare-up involving redundant 
miners in Yangjiazhanzi, 250 miles north-east of Beijing, was typical of 
the type of incident now taking place regularly in China.

Cars were smashed, shops looted and fuel stores set alight as the town was 
embroiled in a three-day battle between 20,000 miners and soldiers 
following the announcement that the largest local employer, a molybdenum 
mine, was to close.

Workers were further enraged at the management's decision to offer only a 
few hundred pounds in severance pay for a lifetime's work. One man and his 
wife, who had worked a combined 70 years at the mine, were given £350 to 
compensate them for lost earnings, pension and health care.

At one stage, demonstrators raided the mine's explosives store to hold the 
troops at bay. The growing mood of unrest has come about despite the tight 
lid kept on labour disputes by the Communist Party.

Independent trade unions are banned, and any sign of a co-ordination of 
protests in different areas prompts a harsh response. Labour activists are 
frequently detained in laogai labour camps to undergo "re-education". 
However, worker discontent has been escalating across China, according to 
new figures.

The number of officially recorded strikes soared to more than 120,000 in 
1999 - a 14-fold increase in five years. The new statistics are all the 
more remarkable as they will have been "massaged" by officials in an 
attempt to gloss over rising tensions.

They illustrate the frustrations among a workforce that was nurtured on 
promises of jobs for life but is now confronted with the collapse of 
uneconomic and outdated heavy industry. Many employers are failing to pay 
salaries and entitlements to their workers on a regular basis - causing 
great hardship.

Those laid off are often forced to sell household items from makeshift 
street stalls to earn the money they need to live. One old soldier, who was 
demobbed from the People's Liberation Army in the late Fifties to work in a 
factory, said hardship was rising, even for those who were still being paid.

He said: "Pensions and salaries aren't going up, but rents and electricity 
prices are," he said. "If you paid for enough electricity to heat your 
home, you couldn't eat. So people have to steal the electricity."

There is an almost uniform bitterness among ordinary Chinese against 
officials and company managers who have been able to enrich themselves from 
their positions. Yet despite rising resentment, corruption is still on the 
increase.

One Hong Kong academic estimates that the party-appointed management of 
state-run factories skim more than £8 billion into their own bank accounts 
- usually overseas - every year. In a move eerily reminiscent of the dying 
days of the Soviet bloc a decade ago, the Chinese Communist Party is now 
trying to distract people's attention from the inequalities that are 
feeding their deep-seated grievances.

Last week the propaganda machine was busy issuing reports of crowded 
airports and bustling streets in an attempt to obscure the real reason for 
the extended break. Newspapers reported a stampede to the shops, claiming 
growing consumer confidence that the economy was improving.

But a quick visit to one of Beijing's biggest department stores revealed 
that, while people were out in force, few were spending with the abandon 
that the government had hoped for. Official figures put the annual economic 
growth rate at eight per cent. But the steady decline of state-owned 
companies, which still employ more than half the urban workforce, has 
pitched the country into a malaise that will not be lifted by last week's 
extra holiday.

Li Qiang, an electrical appliance salesman, said few people had taken up 
the official invitation to spend freely during the holiday. He said: 
"People are still afraid to spend. The whole economy has been changing 
dramatically since 1994. There are so many laid off from state-owned 
companies that, until social welfare improves, people won't spend money 
needlessly."

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