Monday, March 30, 2015

China’s ageing construction workers and the urgent need for an industry overhaul


At some construction sites, 90 percent of the workers are over 50 years old.
Major improvements in working conditions and hiring practices will be needed if new, younger workers are to join what is currently a dangerous, insecure and poorly paid...
CLB.ORG.HK

Monday, March 23, 2015

New Year starts with a bang in China’s factory to the world

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New Year starts with a bang in China’s factory to the world
Listening to the Guangdong Human Resources and Social Security Bureau, you might be forgiven for thinking that everything is just fine in China’s factory to the world. The bureau announced last week that nearly 95 percent of Guangdong’s roughly ten million migrant workers had returned after the Spring Festival break, and that employee numbers had reached or already exceeded pre-holiday levels in 80 percent of the province’s enterprises.
What the bureau failed to mention however was that several major strikes had broken out since the holiday including one at the vast Yue Yuen shoe factory, which continued as the bureau’s press conference rambled on. As we show in this newsletter, workers are still angry about wage arrears, low wages and social security, and now, new regulations that restrict access to housing funds.
Also in this newsletter: Why Cambodia’s factories now resemble those in Dongguan a decade ago, and how civil society is responding to the growth of the workers’ movement in Guangdong.
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Housing fund reform angers workers in China’s factory to the world
The municipal government in Dongguan, China’s “factory to the world,” is making it more difficult for workers, already squeezed by the economic slowdown, to get their hands on their housing fund contributions.
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From Dongguan to Phnom Penh, its déjà vu all over again
In 2004, CLB investigated the pay and working conditions of migrant women workers in Dongguan. In 2014, Human Rights Watch investigated the pay and working conditions of the predominately women workers in Cambodia’s garment industry: The results were predictably similar. Photo HRW.
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China’s labour groups need to be in line with the needs and demands of workers
The veteran labour lawyer and advocate for collective bargaining Duan Yi has called on China’s labour groups to work together to better serve the interests of China’s workers.
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Students use crowd funding website to support worker activist in Guangzhou
When a 22-year-old medical student from Guangzhou, Chen Weixiang, heard about the dismissal of local sanitation worker and labour activist Yu Wucang, he decided to help.

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

China Labor Watch (CLW)

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Tuesday, March 3, 2015

China Just Sided With Russia Over The Ukraine Conflict

China Just Sided With Russia Over The Ukraine Conflict



    When it comes to the Ukraine proxy war, which started in earnest just about one year ago with the violent coup that overthrew then president Yanukovich and replaced him with a local pro-US oligarch, there has been no ambiguity who the key actors were: on the left, we had the west, personified by the US, the European Union, and NATO in general; while on the right we had Russia. In fact, if there was any confusion, it was about the role of that other "elephant in the room" - China.
    To be sure, a question few asked throughout the Ukraine civil war is just whose side is China leaning toward. After all the precarious balance of power between NATO and Russia had resulted in a stalemate in which neither side has an obvious advantage (even as the Ukraine economy died, and its currency hyperinflated, waiting for a clear winner), and the explicit or implicit support of China to either camp would make all the difference in the world, not to mention the world's most formidable axis.
    Today we finally got the answer, and the winner is... this guy:
    Xinhua reported that late on Thursday Qu Xing, China's ambassador to Belgium, was quoted as blaming competition between Russia and the West for the Ukraine crisis,urging Western powers to "abandon the zero-sum mentality" with Russia.
    Cited by Reuters, Xing said that Western powers should take into consideration Russia's legitimate security concerns over Ukraine.
    Reuters' assessment of Xing speech: "an unusually frank and open display of support for Moscow's position in the crisis."
    At least it is not a warning to the US to back off or else. Yet.
    Speaking in very clear and explicit language, something diplomats are not used to doing, the Chinese ambassador said the "nature and root cause" of the crisis was the "game" between Russia and Western powers, including the United States and the European Union.

    He said external intervention by different powers accelerated the crisis and warned that Moscow would feel it was being treated unfairly if the West did not change its approach.

    "The West should abandon the zero-sum mentality, and take the real security concerns of Russia into consideration," Qu was quoted as saying.

    His comments were an unusually public show of understanding from China for the Russian position. China and Russia see eye-to-eye on many international diplomatic issues but Beijing has generally not been so willing to back Russia over Ukraine.


    As noted above, China has long been very cautious not to be drawn into the struggle between Russia and the West over Ukraine's future, not wanting to alienate a key ally. And yet, something changed overnight, with this very clear language, warning some could say, that China will no longer tolerate Pax Americana, and even the mere assumption of a unipolar western world, let alone the reality.
    Qu's comments take place just as talks between the United States and its European allies over harsher sanctions against Moscow.


    On Monday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov accused Western powers of trying to dominate and impose their ideology on the rest of world. The United States and European delegations slammed Moscow for supporting rebels in eastern Ukraine.

    Qu said Washington's involvement in Ukraine could "become a distraction in its foreign policy".
    And then, Qu's slap in the face of Obama: "The United States is unwilling to see its presence in any part of the
    world being weakened, but the fact is its resources are limited, and it
    will be to some extent hard work to sustain its influence in external
    affairs.
    "
    Especially if and when China decides to send a few peacekeepers of its own into Ukraine. You know - just to make sure US influence in external affairs isn't "sustained" too much.