|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: China
China: riot in Guangdong province points to broad social unrest
By John Chan
30 November 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
A riot involving some 30,000 people in Jieyang city in southern
Guangdong province on November 10 has highlighted the mounting
hostility of broad layers of the Chinese population to the economic
impositions and autocratic rule of the Stalinist bureaucracy.
According to Radio Free Asia, the incident was triggered by
an argument between a village woman and employees at a toll station
on the only bridge connecting Xianqiao Township and Rongcheng
District. After the woman complained that she was being charged
two yuan for her motorbike, the toll station employees beat her
up.
The incident rapidly provoked an angry protest. Local governments
throughout China have increasingly been using tolls on roads and
bridges as a means of supplementing their income. For farmers
who are already subject to a range of onerous taxes and levies,
these tolls are a source of constant friction.
Following the beating, thousands of local farmers stormed the
toll station; looting the property and setting it alight with
petrol. Four fire engines came to the rescue but were prevented
from reaching the building by the tens of thousands of protestors.
An old man was accidentally killed and two children injured by
a fire engine when reversing, provoking further outrage. Two of
the fire engines were set on fire and seven fire fighters injured.
Hundreds of police and paramilitary units headed by a local
party boss dispersed the crowd around midnight. Dozens of people
were arrested and many more were injured in the confrontation.
The following day, the local police bureau warned they would severely
punish ringleaders of the riot.
The riot is just one of a series of violent, large-scale clashes
that have erupted in China in recent months. These have included
a protest by tens of thousands of people who stormed government
buildings in Wenzhou and a revolt by 100,000 farmers against their
forced eviction to make way for a hydroelectric dam in Sichuan
province. Both demonstrations were ended by the ruthless use of
security forces. In the latter protest, 17 people were reportedly
killed, 40 injured and more than 100 arrested.
What lies behind the growing protests is the impact of the
vast economic restructuring and the huge influx of foreign capital
that has taken place over the past two decades. Social inequality
has grown enormously as millions of workers in state-owned enterprises
have been thrown out of work; farmers compelled to compete on
the capitalist market and pay rising levels of tax; and tens of
millions of rural immigrants forced to labour in harsh conditions
in sweatshops in coastal China.
The rising price of oil and other raw materials and the increased
cost of energy and transportation have forced both Chinese and
foreign firms to further cut working conditions and wages in order
to maintain their profit margins. Inflation, largely due to the
huge increase of imports and inflow of speculative credit, has
greatly increased the cost of living for millions of people.
Such conditions are causing rising social tensions. According
to recent official figures, the number of protests rose by 15
percent last year to more than 58,000 separate incidents, involving
more than 3 million people. The latest riot in Guangdong provinceChinas
most dynamic export regionindicates the social unrest is
no longer confined to backward inland provinces but is occurring
in relatively prosperous coastal areas as well.
A series of strikes have been reported among workers in the
Guangdong province. In early November, nearly a thousand employees
from a Dongguan-based home appliance manufacturer blocked the
factory gate, demanding at least one day off a week and increased
pay.
On November 12, workers from a Shenzhen-based factory producing
audio speaker parts took two of their Hong Kong bosses hostage,
out of fear that the bankrupt company would not pay them 200,000
yuan of owed wages. On November 22, hundreds of workers clashed
with security guards and police during a protest against layoffs
at an electronic company in Shenzhen.
The recent trial of workers jailed over a protest at Stella,
a major Taiwanese shoe manufacturer, earlier in the year gives
an indication of the sentiments of broad layers of working people.
As reported in the Washington Post, their defence lawyer
Chen Nanliu told the court that their protests over unpaid wages
and poor working conditions were legitimate because there was
a clear and pressing social cause, namely the fact our society
today permits and encourages the most naked form of social injustice.
In his final statement, Chen compared the conditions facing
shoe workers to those of exploited Chinese labourers prior to
the 1949 revolution under the Kuomintang regime. Unlike in the
past, he declared, today the Communist Party is fighting
shoulder-to-shoulder with the coldblooded capitalists in their
struggle against the workers. That such criticisms should
be openly presented in court is a measure of the depth of opposition
among workers to the Stalinist regime.
The rising level of protests in China is causing growing concerns
both in Beijing and also internationally. Having tens of billions
of dollars invested in cheap labour sweatshops in China, foreign
capital is nervous about the explosive consequences of the countrys
vast social changes. Within the Stalinist bureaucracy itself,
there has been an ongoing and increasingly bitter debate over
where the Communist Party should seek new social bases of support.
Neither Beijing nor its foreign backers have any answers to
the deepening social problems facing tens of millions of peopleother
than violent police repression.
See Also:
Martial law declared as unrest deepens
in rural China
[15 November 2004]
Mass protests in China point to sharp
social tensions
[1 November 2004]
Chinese capitalism:
industrial powerhouse or sweatshop of the world?
[31 January 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2004
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |