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China: Hundreds of Protests a Day Against the Super-exploitation by CapitalSteve Tremblay, Samedi, Octobre 20, 2007 - 09:19 (Reportage ind. / Ind. news report | Politiques & classes sociales | Repression | Resistance & Activism | Solidarite internationale | Syndicats/Unions - Travail/Labor)
Steve Tremblay
The article below is a reproduction of our comrades of Battaglia Comunista. The translation is the Communist Worker’ Organisation. The CWO (British) and Battaglia Comunista (Italy)are Affiliate of the International Bureau for the Revolutionary Party (IBRP). Some internationalist communists, Montréal China: Hundreds of Protests a Day Against the Super-exploitation by Capital Economic Boom Widens the Class Differences in this Huge Asian Country — From Battaglia Comunista4 (April 2007) One dead and 60 injured: that was the outcome of clashes between March 10th and 12th in central China. The protest, involving 20000 demonstrators faced by thousands of police and soldiers, was caused by revelations of corruption and above all by the doubling of the price of bus tickets arbitrarily applied on the Chinese New Year. [1] « … are taking control of the area, inch by inch, interrogating citizens and asking that anyone who started the protest give themselves up to the authorities. » Meanwhile the local authorities revoked the contract of the bus company Anda, which had provoked the violence when it raised the price of the bus tickets to $1.90. The cost has now been fixed at $0.65. Local officials have played down what has happened, speaking officially of “a simple protest like so many others�?, but it is significant that a deputy of the People’s National Assembly meeting in Beijing a few days later had asked his Hunan colleagues “how is it possible for something on this scale to have taken place?�? Violent protests have also been confirmed in Guixi, in Jiangsi province, against the Government’s decision to found two cities at the same time as reducing wages and compensation payments to those who lose their land. Thousands of demonstrators gathered in the vicinity of the station and blocked the main railway lines to Shanghai and the Eastern provinces for six hours. Photographs show thousands of demonstrators throwing rocks at the police and a car burning. At least 40 people were hurt in the clashes. It is widely believed that there are no social conflicts in China, probably due to the equally mistaken belief that no trades unions means no struggles. On the contrary, conflicts are constantly multiplying throughout the Celestial Empire. We have documented on several occasions in the last few years, the hard and courageous struggle of the Chinese working class since the 2002 revolt which involved tens of thousands of workers in the oil producing basin of Daqing. According to a nervous report by the Minister for Public Security, Zhou Youkang in 2005: These “facts�? clearly need to be taken with a pinch of salt. They are easily twisted and based on a vague definition of “mass incidents�? which can mean a wide variety of social protest from peaceful marches to violent protests. [2] Nonetheless this declaration is significant, and gives an idea of the sense of anxiety in the Government which, according to the latest proposal, intends to use the Army rather than the police to maintain public order! The growing protests follow, step by step, the so-called “miracle�? of Chinese economic growth, the most important feature of which is the inhuman level of exploitation and a widening class divide which the so-called “Communist Party�? has recently made even more apparent with the new law on private property. Il Manifesto (March 9th) also confirmed this. It has taken a long time to produce the present law. It started with the change to the Constitution in 2004 according to which “the private property of citizens is inviolable under the law�?. It is not the first step, and it certainly won’t be the last, in the drive towards an ever greater concentration and centralisation of capital for both the state apparatus and its functionaries, and also private entrepreneurs. The next step, which they have already leaked, will be the privatisation of agricultural holdings. If they prefer not to take away the main support of about 800 million people at the moment this won’t be possible when industrialisation, dislocation, urbanisation, and the transport system, driven by the spasmodic and desperate search for profits, demand further space. For the moment the latest reform has extended the length of tenure for landholdings to 50 years. [3] “This action has been taken,�? Vice-President Wang openly stated, “because a social security network has not yet been established in the countryside�?. The Chinese ruling class are well aware of the importance of the agricultural sector for containing social tensions: a large number of the protests are about land appropriations, carried out by corrupt local officials, leaving the peasants with derisory sums in compensation. [4] With this in mind, Premier Wen Jibao has announced the provision of resources for “the new socialist campaign�? for health, education, social security and the … army. The Chinese proletariat is faced with a difficult future. But the courageous struggles which they have engaged in recently, though disjointed and confused, still have the capacity and the potential to represent an alternative to the ever more strident contradictions of a system offering only super-exploitation. [1] The first demonstrators started to assemble around a government building in Zhushan, a village in the province of Hunan on Friday March 9th. The protests increased over the weekend. “The manager of the bus firm replied by sending four bus loads of goons with the aim of intimidating the crowd; the local police seemed to be on their side�?, an activist present stated. On Monday, the provincial authorities put 20 lorry loads of soldiers in the villages in order to add to the manpower of the 1700 police. According to witnesses they immediately began to charge the crowd using electric shock batons and clubs. “They hit everyone, the old, women, young children and passers-by�?. The crowd responded by throwing bricks and stones, nine army vehicles were set on fire. The battle lasted 5 hours and government officials remained surrounded until 8:00 at night before the crowd dispersed. The Hong Kong daily, The South China Morning Post told of one victim: a student who was wounded in the clashes on Sunday, and died on the Monday. Revolutionary Perspectives - 2007-08-13 |
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