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Thousands of Chinese students riot over bleak job prospects
By John Chan
5 July 2006
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Facing an uncertain future, thousands of graduating Chinese
college students expressed their frustration last month in protests
and riots.
The biggest demonstration erupted on June 15. Some 10,000 students
in central Chinas Zhengzhou city ransacked classrooms and
administrative offices and clashed with hundreds of police in
one of the most intense student protests since the 1989 Tiananmen
Square massacre.
The riot broke out at the private Shengda Economic, Trade and
Management College, which is affiliated with the prestigious Zhengzhou
University and has 13,000 students. After paying expensive tuition
fees and undertaking years of study, students were angered by
the colleges decision to award graduates diplomas in its
own name, rather than Zhengzhou University, as promised
in its advertisements. The title Zhengzhou University Shengda
Economic, Trade and Management College will immediately
reveal the second-class character of their qualifications to employers.
Amid intensive competition in Chinas labour market, even
a degree from a well-known university no longer guarantees a job.
According to recent government estimates, despite an annual economic
growth of more than 9 percent, some 60 percent of Chinas
four million college graduates this year are unlikely to obtain
work (see: Chinas middle-class
dream shattered: millions of graduates face unemployment).
Hong Kongs Ming Pao newspaper reported on June
19: The maddened students first threw objects out of the
windows of their quarters, and there was a rain of vacuum flasks,
beer bottles, fire-fighting apparatus, TV sets, washing machines
and glass. Later that night, thousands of students gathered
in front of the administration buildings and chanted slogans demanding
their money back. Students smashed offices and library facilities,
and burned the statues of school founders.
The angry students then swarmed onto the streets, smashing
things as they went.... The police made several sallies, but faced
with attack by a hail of stones, could only retreat. After the
Zhengzhou armed police were sent in, the students calmed down
somewhat, Ming Pao noted. A hundred armed police
officers and 14 police vehicles then sealed the campus. Security
personnel took photos of students who participated in the riot
and refused to let most students leave the college. An online
school bulletin board was shut down after students used it to
voice protests and emailed their comments to international media.
In response, students staged sit-in protests and a boycott
of exams over the following days. One student, Xu, told AFP: The
stance of the school remains tough but if the institute does not
resolve this issue, we will continue to boycott classes and examinations.
A Canadian teacher working at the college emailed Canadas
Globe and Mail on June 20: This morning the students
have gathered and about half of them are refusing to take their
exams today. They feel cheated and lied to, and they have lost
everything, including their parents money. The Chinese teachers
have ordered the students to write their exams but they are refusing.
On June 22, the New York Times provided some background
to the protest. Most of the students enrolled at Shengda did not
perform well enough in national college entrance exams to get
into prestige universities. They paid $US2,500 a year to attend
Shengdacompared to Chinas per capita gross domestic
product (GDP) of just $1,500. Shengdas fees are five times
higher than those of the national-level Zhengzhou University.
Far from obtaining a higher quality of education, the exorbitant
fees are a means of virtually buying a university degree.
In 1998, the Chinese governments market reform
of the education system included the expansion of largely profit-making
private college education. Hundreds of new colleges were set up
to enroll millions of students who could not enter the big public
universities but were able to pay expensive fees for higher education.
Some of the colleges offered certificates bearing the names of
higher status institutions as a major attraction and charged higher
prices. A regulation passed in 2003, however, required colleges
to issue diplomas with their own names.
In order to placate angry students, Hou Heng, the headmaster
of the Shengda college, was forced to resign under pressure from
his superiors at Zhengzhou University and probably also from the
government. Nevertheless, the students are unlikely to receive
what they had paid fora certificate telling employers they
were trained in Zhengzhou University.
Wang, a Shengda student from a rural community in Henan province,
told the Times why the downgrading of the certificates
was catastrophic for students. There are not many positions
open in the business world compared with the numbers of applicants,
and they all go to the national-level university graduates,
he said. Wang said most his schoolmates would struggle to pay
off their debts while facing great difficulty in finding jobs.
Shengda students were not the first to protest. Last December,
3,000 students at the East Soft Information Institute of Dalian
city, affiliated to Northeast University, rioted over the same
issue.
As the protests continued in Zhengzhou, Associated Press reported
on June 21 that some 9,000 students from the Jiangan campus of
Sichuan University in southwestern China rioted after the authorities
banned them from watching the soccer World Cup. They set fires
and smashed equipment after the school administration shut down
the power supply at midnight to force students to prepare for
exams.
On June 25, according to the BBC Chinese service, based on
reports in a number of Hong Kong newspapers, thousands of students
at Jiujiang College in Jiangsu province protested against arbitrary
school fees. The students smashed some school facilities and several
cars belonging to school officials.
The Chinese government is acutely aware of the danger of student
unrest, which historically has been the prelude of wider working
class discontent. In June 1989, the demands of Beijing university
students for democratic rights rapidly become a focus for disaffection
among workers throughout the country, who raised their own social
demands. The movement ended in a bloodbath after the regime ordered
troops and tanks to crush the demonstrations in Tiananmen Square.
Seventeen years on, none of the underlying social conflicts have
been resolved but instead have intensified as Beijing has stepped
up its capitalist measures.
The emergence of protests among poor and desperate Chinese
students is part of broader global processes. Earlier this year,
millions of French students and workers waged a massive struggle
against draconian legislation that allows employers to treat school
graduates as expendable cheap labour.
The explosive events in France may seem unrelated to those
in China. In reality, the social attacks on French youth cannot
be understood in isolation from the plight of hundreds of millions
of Chinese workers and youth who are being ruthlessly exploited
by global capital in order to drive down wages and social conditions
around the world.
See Also:
Asian growth rates rise but
employment problems deepen
[9 May 2006]
Beijing's new moral model:
from peasant soldier to middle class consumer
[30 March 2006]
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