Unrest Grows in China's Old State Plants

Stephen E Philion philion at hawaii.edu
Tue May 16 23:33:44 PDT 2000


NYT May 17, 2000

Unrest Grows in China's Old State Plants

By ERIK ECKHOLM

B EIJING, May 16 -- Up to 2,000 unpaid workers and retirees have

besieged their factory and government offices in a northeastern

city over the last two days, the latest example of growing labor

unrest as China's once-dominant state industries collapse.

On Monday, nearly 1,000 employees of the Liaoyang Ferroalloy

Factory gathered at the plant gate and blocked the adjacent highway

as they demanded wages and pensions that some have not received for

as long as 20 months, demonstrators said today by telephone.

The factory is in Liaoyang, a city of 1.8 million in the Rust Belt

province of Liaoning, where similar protests have been frequent.

After midnight, hundreds of police officers broke up the crowd,

beating people and detaining three retirees who had helped organize

the demonstration, according to relatives of those in custody. One

detainee, Lu Ran, 66, had a heart attack overnight and was moved to

a hospital.

This morning, as news of the detentions spread, close to 2,000

furious current and former workers of the factory gathered around

the offices of the city government, seeking the release of the

three organizers, as well as their back pay. Eventually, workers'

12 representatives met a deputy mayor, and at day's end, after

having secured a promise that current and past wages, pensions and

living stipends for laid-off workers would soon be paid, the

protesters went home.

The detainees' fate remained unclear, a protester said, and there

was talk of possible further demonstrations in the days ahead. Many

workers remained skeptical about the promised pay, the protester

added, because similar promises have been broken in the past.

Around China, workers' protests, strikes and other labor disputes

have rapidly increased over the last few years, according to

official records and Western diplomats.

The backdrop is the wrenching transition from state-owned

enterprises, many of which are not competitive. But protests often

also reflect worker resentment against corruption or unfair

treatment.

The Communist Party leadership is plainly worried. But most

political experts say they believe that the thousands of

confrontations reported each year do not seriously threaten party

rule.

As was promised today, the government has generally sought to help

companies pay off protesting workers.

At the same time, any independent leaders who try to organize

across companies or provincial lines are jailed.

One of the largest and most bitter disputes known to outsiders in

recent years took place in February in the mining town of

Yangjiazhangzi, also in Liaoning Province. Angered by corruption

and the closing of the town's main employer, a state-run molybdenum

mine, residents rioted for three days, burning cars and smashing

windows before the army moved in.

The workers at the metals factory today carried signs saying,

"Being Owed Wages Is Not a Crime," and, "Release the Workers'

Representatives," reported the Information Center for Human Rights

and Democracy in Hong Kong.

The factory in Liaoyang, a former Communist flagship that has

operated for more than 40 years, is responsible for 8,000 workers,

an employee said, including 1,300 retirees and more than 1,000 who

have been laid off as business falters.

"The workers are very angry," said Pang Li, whose father, Pang

Qingxiang, was detained. "Some haven't been paid for more than a

year, and they've tried to get answers from the government many

times."

A group petitioned City Hall for help in February, said Liu Xizhen,

the wife of Mr. Lu, who had the heart attack. "The mayor promised

to look into it," Ms. Liu, 64, said. "But we didn't hear anything

after that, and nobody received any pay. 'People don't have their

pensions. They don't have any money to see the doctor. They don't

have any money to buy food."

Her family has been especially hard hit, Ms. Liu said, because her

husband, their two sons and their wives all worked at the metals

factory. Her husband is entitled to a pension of $48 a month, which

he has not received for four months, she added, while the other

four have been laid off and have never received the $18 monthly

stipends that they are due.

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