The Socialist

The Socialist 12 July 2007

Fighting low pay, defending jobs and services

Fighting low pay, defending jobs and services

Victory to the postal workers

Public support for Post Office counters strike


Bob Crow calls for new party

National Shop Stewards Network conference: A good starting point for strengthening struggle


TGWU/Unite conference delegates cheer call for action on anti-trade union laws

Urgent appeal for solidarity from contract workers at the Gualberto Villarroel oil refinery in Cochabamba, Bolivia


Action needed to save the NHS

Campaign saves Swansea hospital unit

Sussex must fight back against NHS cuts

Durham health cuts show need for new workers' party


Wales Assembly coalition no answer to workers' problems

Cardiff: Fight school cuts and closures


Nurseries campaign embarrasses councillors

Southall Labour councillors cross floor

Council workers make a stand


The 'July days' - rich in lessons for today


London Underground derailment: Kick out dangerous profiteers!

Kwik Save workers betrayed by bosses and union


Socialist Party Youth and students


Political discourse can swing!


South Africa: union leaders call off biggest-ever strike

Slave-labour scandal in China

 
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Slave-labour scandal in China

NEWS OF slavery, torture, human trafficking and children imprisoned in conditions "worse than dog kennels" has exploded like a bomb in China and dealt a serious blow to the credibility of the ruling 'communist' party.

Vincent Kolo, Beijing

By 22 June, 591 slave labourers, including 51 children, had been freed as a result of one of the biggest police operations ever. A thousand more children may still be enslaved.

Hundreds of millions have watched the shocking, heart-rending television footage of dazed, mistreated, half-starved slaves as they emerged from captivity. The youngest was an eight-year-old. Some were still wearing their school uniforms from the day they were kidnapped. The traffickers charged 500 yuan (roughly Û52) for each slave.

But this mobilisation of police resources - a reported 45,000 police in two provinces - only came about because of the public and media outcry that was started when parents of missing children organised themselves into a campaign group and then publicised their plight on the internet (see article on chinaworker website: Who can save our children?).

One group of parents pooled their money to buy a car to tour the brickworks of Shanxi in search of their children. By their own efforts they managed to liberate around a hundred children. But they also learned that the police and local officials were unwilling to help and in many cases were in cohoots with the slave masters.

This episode underlines that on the basis of the capitalist 'market', such practices are impossible to eradicate. In Shanxi and other poor inland provinces there are tens of thousands of unregistered kilns, foundries and mines. How do they continually escape legal controls?

The answer is of course political protection: kiln owners are warned in advance of periodic crackdowns, police and workplace inspectors are bribed, many villages are ruled by the profiteers or their relatives.

Law of profit

Nobody is really shocked to learn that the slavers and traffickers were protected at local level. But this time the central government's credibility is also on the line.

And what difference will new laws passed by the central government make? China already has laws prohibiting child labour and other abuses, but these laws are simply ignored. The measures announced by central government are about damage limitation - preventing the public outcry from getting out of hand. The only law that is never disobeyed in today's China seems to be the law of profit!

The striking thing about the government's deliberations is that no section of the ruling 'communist' party - whose name in Chinese means 'the party of public property' - has raised the idea of re-imposing state control over 'slave' industries such as coal mining, metal-working and building materials.

China's communist party is as determined as any capitalist government, if not more determined, to resist measures that could indicate a reversal of its neo-liberal 'reform and opening' programme.

They fear that measures renewing state control, even implemented bureaucratically and undemocratically as previously under Maoism, would strengthen the position of workers, and could trigger demands for more and bolder measures against the profiteers.

Full article on www.chinaworker.info and www.socialistworld.net


Also in The Socialist 12 July 2007:

Fighting low pay, defending jobs and services

Victory to the postal workers

Public support for Post Office counters strike


National Shop Stewards Network

Bob Crow calls for new party

National Shop Stewards Network conference: A good starting point for strengthening struggle


Socialist Party workplace news

TGWU/Unite conference delegates cheer call for action on anti-trade union laws

Urgent appeal for solidarity from contract workers at the Gualberto Villarroel oil refinery in Cochabamba, Bolivia


Socialist Party NHS campaign

Action needed to save the NHS

Campaign saves Swansea hospital unit

Sussex must fight back against NHS cuts

Durham health cuts show need for new workers' party


Wales

Wales Assembly coalition no answer to workers' problems

Cardiff: Fight school cuts and closures


Tales from the council chambers

Nurseries campaign embarrasses councillors

Southall Labour councillors cross floor

Council workers make a stand


Marxist analysis: history

The 'July days' - rich in lessons for today


Socialist Party news and analysis

London Underground derailment: Kick out dangerous profiteers!

Kwik Save workers betrayed by bosses and union


Socialist Party events

Socialist Party Youth and students


Socialist Party review

Political discourse can swing!


International socialist news and analysis

South Africa: union leaders call off biggest-ever strike

Slave-labour scandal in China


 

Home   |   The Socialist 12 July 2007   |   Join the Socialist Party

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China's food contamination crisis deepens

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