http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/police-liberate-chinese-slaves/story-e6frg6so-1225873746845

Police liberate Chinese slaves 
Jane Macartney 
From: The Australian 
June 01, 2010 12:00AM 

CHINESE police have freed 33 slave labourers who were held in a brickworks and 
tortured with electric shocks when they disobeyed their masters. 

The brutal conditions at the kiln - the latest to be exposed in a series of 
rural slavery scandals - came to light when a man escaped and told police.

The farmer, named as Mr Song, had made his way from the poor coal-producing 
Shanxi province in northwestern China to a city farther east, where he hoped to 
earn more to feed his family back home.

The moment that he arrived at Shijiazhuang railway station on April 17, he was 
approached by a stranger and offered a job.

Instead of the promised employment, Mr Song found himself working as a slave 
with 33 other men at the brick kiln.

Conditions were appalling. The workers were regularly beaten, and those who 
protested were given electric shocks. At night they were herded into a room and 
the door was locked.

They were not paid and were forced to work between 14 and 18 hours a day and 
watched at all times by guards - who even followed them into the toilets.

But Mr Song was not cowed. He tried to escape but was swiftly recaptured and 
beaten with staves. On the evening of May 18, he made another attempt. This 
time he succeeded, and went to the police. They organised their forces and 
launched a raid to take the owners by surprise.

They struck early in the morning on May 21 and arrested 11 people - including 
the foreman and owner. They also found the machine used to administer the 
electric shocks.

The raid on the kiln follows a series of slavery scandals. The most prominent, 
in 2007, was uncovered when an investigative journalist led authorities to 
thousands of people forced to work at similar kilns in Henan and Shanxi 
provinces. The workers were also subjected to regular beatings, locked in 
squalid conditions at night, fed near-starvation diets and not paid.

A parliamentary investigation said that 53,000 migrant workers had been 
employed in more than 2000 brick kilns in Shanxi province alone. Since 2007, 
reports of slavery have surfaced sporadically, suggesting that a crackdown has 
failed to halt unscrupulous bosses, some of whom are believed to be in 
collusion with the authorities.

The Times


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