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Take a look under the heading Disastrous Attempts about half way down the
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<p><b>'Made in China' label takes toll</b>
<p>By Frank Langfitt, Sun Foreign Staff
<p> SHENZHEN, China -- The industrial revolution that turned "Made
in
<br>China" into a catch phrase has come at a steep human price and perhaps
<br>nowhere is it more painfully apparent than in the apartment of attorney
<br>Zhou Litai. Zhou shares his home with his clients: more than 30 migrant
<br>laborers who have lost body parts -- fingers, hands, arms and feet
-- in
<br>factory accidents.
<p> His living room resembles a hospital ward in wartime. Young men
wander
<br>about in shirts with empty sleeves. Others shuffle around on prosthetic
<br>feet, the soles of their leather work boots scraping softly along the
<br>tile floor.
<p> Ma Shuangqing, from central China's Hubei Province, lost his left
arm
<br>to a lathe built in the 1920s. "I thought I would come here for a year,
<br>make some money and go home," says Ma, 31, repeating the mantra of
<br>migrant laborers in South China. "I didn't know I was going to get
injured."
<p> Mao Tse-tung once called workers the masters of this country,
but today
<br>China is among the most dangerous places to work in the world.
<p> Each year, more than 100,000 people die on the job. In 1998, officials
<br>say, more than 12,000 laborers were maimed in the factories of this
<br>southern boom town alone. The actual number might be twice as many.
<p> This spring, the issue of Chinese working conditions will figure
<br>prominently as Congress debates normalizing trade relations with Beijing
<br>as a part of China's bid to join the World Trade Organization.
<p> The issue pits organized labor, which fears losing U.S. jobs,
against
<br>big business, which sees China as the world's greatest potential
<br>consumer market. It is shaping up as the biggest battle of its kind
<br>since passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement in 1993.
<p> Labor groups such as the AFL-CIO argue that China should not enjoy
<br>permanent trading privileges until it improves worker safety and
<br>recognizes human rights.
<p> Supporters of the bill, which include the U.S. Chamber of Commerce,
say
<br>increased trade will raise living standards and lead to political and
<br>labor reform, as it has in developed countries.
<p> Shenzhen lies in the Pearl River Delta, China's economic engine
that
<br>runs on foreign investment and migrant labor. The region produces
<br>everything from Reebok sneakers and silk blouses for Ralph Lauren to
<br>Barbie dolls and Beanie Babies.
<p> Shenzhen's development mirrors the country's industrial revolution
over
<br>the past two decades. In 1979, it was a fishing community of about
<br>20,000. Today, it is a modern metropolis of glass and steel buildings
<br>with a population of 4 million.
<p> Deng Xiaoping, the late Chinese leader, sparked the area's rapid
growth
<br>by scrapping Mao's planned economy and unleashing market forces.
<p> As factories sprouted from fields, peasants poured in from China's
<br>crowded interior seeking better wages.
<p> Common stories
<p> Tens of thousands have lost their limbs or lives in the fulfillment
of
<br>their ambitions. The story of Huang Lichun is typical. Huang, a
<br>handsome, almost painfully polite man, came in 1997 from Hubei, where
he
<br>ran a failing tea processing factory.
<p> After working as a security guard, he took a $48-a-month job in
the
<br>delta's Dongguan City with a company making molds for sneaker soles.
<p> Huang lived in a factory dormitory room crammed with 14 beds where
some
<br>laborers slept two to a bunk. He often worked 16-hour shifts pouring
hot
<br>liquid plastic into molds and testing them.
<p> The evening of his injury, he was finishing his second consecutive
<br>18-hour shift and struggling to meet a quota of 60 molds before
<br>midnight. As he tried to unblock the plastic dispenser, the machine
<br>malfunctioned and clamped down on his hand.
<p>Huang lost some skin, but the damage did not appear too severe, he recalls.
<p> To save money, the factory sent him to a small local hospital
instead
<br>of a hospital in the provincial capital of Guangzhou. Doctors amputated
<br>three fingers and part of his thumb. Physicians later told him they
<br>could have been saved, he says.
<p> 'Nobody cares'
<p> Huang received some insurance money and reluctantly returned home
to
<br>face his family. Without his fingers, he couldn't harvest cotton or
<br>plant rice. His 13-year-old daughter has to help him wash clothes.
He
<br>eats with a fork because he can't grasp chopsticks.
<p>"I feel I'm finished," says Huang, who is in his late 20s. "I think
<br>China has made a lot of concessions for foreign investors to come here.
<br>And if accidents happen, nobody cares."
<p> While stories like Huang's remain commonplace, factories have
made
<br>small safety improvements because of negative publicity and consumer
<br>pressure, according to the Hong Kong Christian Industrial Committee,
a
<br>labor monitoring group.
<p> In 1993, 87 people died in a Shenzhen toy factory fire after sealed
<br>windows and blocked doors prevented their escape.
<p> The government responded by cracking down on the illegal practice
of
<br>building dormitories on top of workshops, which greatly increased the
<br>risk of people dying in fires.
<p> Safety training, though, remains rare.
<p> Last month, 17 people died in a fire at an illegal lighter factory
in
<br>Huilai County, about 220 miles northeast of Hong Kong. The blaze started
<br>when a worker tested a disposable lighter while it was leaking fuel.
<p> Disastrous attempts
<p> If they could, laborers would heed the words of Karl Marx and
unite.
<br>But the Communist Party has outlawed independent unions and jailed
those
<br>who have tried to form them. Even informal attempts to organize end
in
<br>disaster.
<p> Pun Ngai, an anthropologist at the University of Hong Kong, spent
six
<br>months working in a Shenzhen electronics factory researching working
<br>conditions. Guards used cattle prods to punish those who broke midnight
<br>curfew, she found. Part of one woman's face turned permanently green
<br>after she used a solvent to wash component parts.
<p>When a worker presented a petition demanding an extra meal a day and
a
<br>pay increase, the factory management not only fired her, it fired all
<br>the laborers from her village and her friends.
<p> Frustrated and seemingly powerless, injured workers have turned
to
<br>local courts for justice.
<p> Building a reputation
<p> Zhou Litai, the Shenzhen attorney, has made his name by taking
these
<br>politically unpopular cases and winning big awards. Such a thing would
<br>have been unthinkable before China passed its first labor law in 1995.
<p> Zhou's first major victory involved a couple killed by a truck
at a
<br>Shenzhen toy factory. He won $40,000 in damages, a fortune in a country
<br>where the average urban income is a little over $700 a year.
<p> "Before, if any worker got killed in a road accident, they were
never
<br>compensated," says Zhou, 42, a passionate advocate who emphasizes his
<br>points by jabbing his finger in the air.
<p>As Zhou began to win, word spread through the delta's hospitals, which
<br>devote entire floors to industrial amputees. Most of his clients have
<br>neither homes nor jobs, so he set up a two-story apartment where they
<br>can live until their cases are settled.
<p> Zhou, who earns his fees on a contingency basis, has filed more
than
<br>200 suits since 1997 and won at least 40. Most of the rest are pending.
<p>'Hated and feared'
<p> His victories have angered local officials who rely on foreign
<br>investors for taxes and bribes. They tried and failed to revoke his
law
<br>license and sent police to his hometown of Chongqing to dig up dirt
on
<br>his past, he says.
<p> "In Shenzhen and Guangdong Province, I'm hated and feared," says
Zhou,
<br>who has been profiled in newspapers and television programs around
the
<br>country. Zhou's success is due as much to his skill and China's desire
<br>to build the rule of law as it is to the regime's need to maintain
<br>stability in a rapidly changing society.
<p> With millions laid off from state-owned factories and more pouring
in
<br>from the countryside, labor demonstrations have become common. After
<br>China's expected accession to the WTO, foreign competition could throw
<br>another 14 million farmers out of work.
<p> Many will head for factories here.
<p> Averting violence
<p> Much as some authorities complain about Zhou, he might be helping
them.
<br>Without people like him and protection from the courts, injured workers
<br>might resort to violence and join the growing ranks of people
<br>disillusioned with the Communist Party and its authoritarian rule.
<p> Zhou Xianping, 24, from southwest China's Sichuan province, lost
both
<br>feet three years ago when he was electrocuted by a naked power line
in a
<br>chemical factory. A trail of seared flesh runs from his cheek down
the
<br>length of his body where he was burned.
<p> Zhou Litai, no relation, has won him $9,000 in compensation and
hopes
<br>to double that on appeal. If it weren't for his attorney, the injured
<br>laborer says he might have extracted justice through other means.
<p> "I might have gone back and got some friends and kidnapped my
boss," he
<br>said.
<p> Originally published on Apr 3 2000
<p>Sunspot, Maryland's Online Community
<br>
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