Laid-off Sichuan Workers Beaten and Detained Following Petition Attempt
September 21, 2006
Amidst press reports of a crackdown against
petitioners in Beijing in the run-up to China’s October 1 National Day
celebrations, Human Rights in China (HRIC) has learned of the beating and
detention of petitioning unemployed workers in Suining City, Sichuan Province.
Sources in China told HRIC that on the morning
of September 20, more than 40 workers laid off from Suining’s Suizhou
Guesthouse went to the office of the Suining Municipal Party committee to
deliver a petition. When no officials came out to accept the petition, the
workers continued to wait outside the office building.
Sources say that a little after 4:00 p.m., the
deputy director of the Suining Municipal Public Security Bureau (PSB), Wang
Yanwen, and the director of the city’s Letters and Petitions Office, Li
Nianguang, arrived with several dozen uniformed and plain-clothes police
officers and attempted to forcibly remove the petitioning workers. Police officers
reportedly pushed two female workers, Zhang
Xiaohua and Liu Xiaohong, to the
ground, and Zhang was badly beaten, suffering serious head injuries and nausea
as a result. Sources say both women were subsequently taken to the local
hospital, where Zhang was diagnosed with a cerebral concussion. The Party
Committee head reportedly instructed the hospital not to treat the women, but
they were admitted nevertheless.
Sources say that police forcibly detained two other
female petitioners, Wang Jun and Xu Haiyan,
as they were returning home after the petitioning attempt. In addition, a male
worker, Huang Zhuyu, was detained by
local police after he returned home that evening. According the HRIC’s latest
information, police are on the lookout for a number of other petitioners, who
have not returned home for fear of being detained or harassed. According to HRIC’s sources, the workers had been
laid off after the Suizhou Guesthouse went bankrupt and its assets were sold
undervalued to the benefit of a single bidder.
Further, several audits had reportedly found evidence of corruption by
the general manager of the guesthouse, Xie Zhicheng, who is now the deputy
secretary general of the Suining Municipal Government.
After most of the guesthouse’s workers were laid off,
they repeatedly petitioned the municipal government and Party committee
requesting assistance in obtaining unemployment benefits, but officials
reportedly used stalling tactics, leaving the workers with no option but to
continue petitioning. HRIC deplores the brutal treatment of these
laid-off workers, who were only exercising their lawful right to petition
following the failure of local authorities to provide unemployment benefits.
This incident is especially troubling in light of recent reports of a large-scale
round-up of hundreds of petitioners in Beijing.
Falling immediately before the celebration of China’s
National Day, the appalling treatment of these petitioners highlights the
failure of the Chinese Communist Government to fulfill its commitment to China’s
underprivileged and working classes.
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