Free Wu Guijun, Defend the Worker’s Right to Strike! Please Co-sign and Support!

To Mr. Xu Qin, Mayor of Shenzhen City, Mrs. Luoli, President of the municipal federation in Shenzhen We are writing to ask the Mayor of Shenzhen City and the municipal federation in Shenzhen to step in and give assistance in cases of Wu Guijun from Diweixin Product Factory in which worker are criminalized for the industrial actions they took to claim their labour rights. Wu was arrested by unknown reason more than 130 days! Illegal detention of WU Guijun for more than a hundred days On 23 May Wu Guijun and nearly 200 workers from Diweixin Product Factory located in Shenzhen were arrested by the anti-riot police on the way to petition the Shiyan district government. They were asking the government to intervene in the one-month long severance negotiation with their employer which was closing down business for relocation from its Shenzhen plant to Huizhou city. Few days after the arrest, the factory management terminated the negotiation with the workers and sacked all the representatives including Wu Guijun. Since his detention on 23 May, Wu was denied free access to his lawyer and family. He is likely to be criminalized and charged by the public security for “assembling a crowd to disturb public order”. Free Wu Guijun! We regret to find that in this case, Wu and other worker leaders were alone in their struggle without receiving support from the trade union. We are concerned that industrial actions taken by workers for claiming their legal rights were put under criminal detention and charged. Although strike is not protected in the domestic laws, freedom of assembly is protected in the PRC Constitution. Our demands: 1. Defend the Worker’s Right to Strike! 2. Protect the Worker leader in the Strike! 3. Urge to give pressure to the government for the release of Mr. Wu and provide all the needed assistance to Mr. Wu and his family. CC to Mr. Huang yebin, Chairman of the Guangdong Provincial Federation of Trade Unions Mr. Zhu xiaodan, the Governor of Guangdong Province ContactFUNG +852 64820109 (HK) +86 14716140109 (China) By Globalization MonitorAsia Monitor Resource Centre

Co-sign Organizations (updated 20130929 )

SACOM

Labour Action China

Labor Vision

Worker Empowerment

China Labor Research Center

Left 21

Globalization Monitor

Asia Monitor Resource Centre

Asia Peace Front

Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions

ラジカルヒューマニズム研究会

Cambodian Construction Trade Union Federation

 


Briefing Paper

Criminalisation of the Strike Leaders in Guangdong province

IHLO, 16 Sept 2013

 

A tightening over the strikes in China is noticed in a number of cases recently and even the governments in Shenzhen and Guangzhou have less tolerance towards the strike leaders. Rather than using collective bargaining for a settlement the governments turn for tougher measures to criminalise the strike leaders.

 

Migrant worker Wu Guizun has been detained by the public security for more than a hundred days since 22 May and is likely to be criminalized for organizing his fellow workers in a homeware factory in Shenzhen to strike and protest the government. Another twelve security workers of the Guangzhou Hospital were put under criminal detention since 20 August. In both cases, the strike leaders were charged for the criminal offence of “assembling a crowd to disturb public order”.

 

It is worrying that it is taking place in Guangdong province, a recognizably more open region with more pro-active ACFTUs that promotes collective bargaining and direct election of the unions.

 

The Facts

(1) Criminal detention of Wu Guizun for more than a hundred days

Wu has worked in Diweixin factory for more than 9 years, earning a monthly wage of USD600. Wu began to promote labour rights consciousness with his fellow workers after an occupational injury. He was elected as one of the worker representatives in the strike in May to handle legal consultation, external communication through the internet and to negotiate with the employer.

 

On 7 May 2013, three hundred workers in Diweixin (Shenzhen) Furniture put down their tools and demanded the Taiwanese employer to clarify the factory relocation and compensation. They suspected the employer of relocating the production from the Shenzhen facility to the new plant in Huizhou city without informing the workforce. Since the beginning of the year, machines and materials had been moved to the new plant in Huizhou city and the orders of the Shenzhen plant had been dramatically cut. They asked the employer for termination of the employment contract, their back wages and compensation. Seven workers’ representatives were elected for negotiation with the employer and Wu was one of them.

 

The negotiation in the first two weeks was not successful as the employer refused to meet the workers’ representatives or give compensation. The workers began a marathon sit-in at the factory while petitioning the Shiyan district and Shenzhen government for intervention. They were dispersed by the police and told to return to work. On 21 May, the employer agreed to compensate the workers’ severance at RMB400 per year of service instead of the legal requirement of one month’s salary per year of service. Without discussing with the workers’ representatives, the striking workers decided to go for a protest at the district government the next day. On 22 May, about 200 workers, including the workers’ representatives and Wu, were arrested by the anti-riot police on the way to the district government office. They were disconnected from communication for a day during the detention. A hundred of them were released after midnight, followed by another 59 of them ten days later. Three worker representatives including Wu were still detained and disconnected. A few days later, the factory management terminated the negotiation with the workers and sacked all the representatives. The strike was called to an end as the intimidated workers were afraid of putting their representatives under greater risk. On 29 June, the other two representatives were released before the 37-day legal maximum period for administrative detention expired.

 

By now Wu is still under detention and he has lost his freedom for more than 100 days without a legal procedure. During the detention, he was deprived of free contact and access to his family and lawyer. His bail-out request was rejected without given a reason. His lawyer has not received any written facts or summon and his family has not been officially notified at all. It is likely that Wu will be officially charged soon for the criminal offence of “assembling a crowd to disturb public order” and the leading offender is liable to three to seven year imprisonment.

 

(2) Twelve security workers in the Guangzhou hospital were put under criminal detention

 

On 26 February 2013, nearly two hundred health care workers and the security guards of the First Hospital of Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine were dismissed by the agency companies without prior notice and severance compensations. These workers had been working in the hospital for nearly twenty years employed under different labour agencies. The latter were affiliated to the hospital which had 20% stake in the companies to hire the auxiliary workers. The agency workers received discriminatory wages and did not have overtime compensation, social insurances, paid leave and not even a proper employment contract compared to the regular workers. They demanded negotiation with the hospital authority to settle their back social insurance premiums and severance compensations. The workers elected their own representatives and began to stage a marathon sit-in at the hospital in mid May. They went to seek the assistance of the provincial and municipal union but failed to get an answer from them.

 

The hospital authority does not want to settle the huge sized back payment of the social insurance of the agency workers, afraid of a ripple effect. Meanwhile the hospital is planning to out-source the auxiliary work, rather than hiring agency workers through its affiliated agency companies after the revised Labour Contract Law came into effect on 1 July 2013.

 

The protest persisted for more than two months relying on the sympathetic support of the community and fellow workers. The health care workers made a difficult decision to call the marathon sit-in to an end in mid August when the hospital authority announced a unilateral offer to compensate RMB20,000 to each of them, implying a recognition of their labour relation. The healthcare workers are planning to continue for litigation to claim their social insurances.

 

The security guards, employed in a different agency company were not given any settlement. They had less bargaining power to demand the hospital authority for a negotiation. On 19 August, they climbed to the roof top of the hospital and had a clash with the police. Twelve of them were put under criminal detention on 20 August for “assembling a crowed to disturb public order” under the Criminal Law.

 

Criminalisation of the strike leader

Previously, administrative detention is commonly used for the purpose of dispersing the strike. The detained workers are released within 15 days with no criminal record. The two cases show less toleration for the prolonged strikes. Since the beginning of the year, most of the strikes are involved with capital relocation or agency workers demanding equal remuneration, the local governments are less financially stable to foot the bill and disperse the strikers. 

 

Although strike is not protected in the laws in China, it is not a criminal offence. Freedom of assembly is also protected in the PRC Constitution.

 

In China, the public security is allowed to put a person for administrative detention up to 15 days without a court order. After that, the public security should produce the case file, the evidence and the request to the Procuratorate for an official arrest permit. Only when the suspect is involved in gang crimes could the Procuratorate approve an extension of 30 days. The public security has clearly violated the Criminal Procedure Law and keeps Wu under illegal detention without a permit and notification to his lawyer and family.

 

ACFTU

The district and Shenzhen FTU have kept silence in the labour dispute of Diweixin. They have not said a word when the workers’ representatives were sacked by the employer and detained without a due procedure by the public security. No legal aid or assistance has been to Wu and his family.

 

In 2011, the Guangzhou Federation of Trade Unions and mainly Chen Weiguang had been pushing for the passing of the regulation on the tripartite negotiation of labour relation for Guangzhou city in lieu of a provincial law on collective bargaining. The law allows the trade unions to pro-actively step in and demand a negotiation with the employer to settle a work stoppage. Workers are also free to request the assistance from the municipal tripartite body to mediate their labour disputes. Yet the municipal and provincial trade union had been silent and unable to get the hospital authority to the negotiation table. Chen Weiguang recalled the fight with the government in the strike in Honda in 2010. He claimed to withdraw the trade union team from the negotiation if the government sent police to the workplace. It is not sure whether this line will be kept with his successor.

 

 

Actions to consider

ITUC has reported about the suppression of the right to strike, the unfair labour practices of the employers and the local laws contradicting the ILO and UN Declaration in the Universal Periodic Review on China, the annual review of the core labour standards on China this year.

 

Is there any occasion to raise the issue of the protection of the workers’ leaders with ACFTU?

 

 

 HUANG Yebin

 Chairman Guangdong Provincial Federation of Trade Unions

 

Dear Mr. Huang,

 

The _____________________________ is writing to ask the Guangdong Provincial Federation of Trade Unions and the municipal federation in Shenzhen to step in and give assistance in two cases in which workers are criminalized for the industrial actions they took to claim their labour rights.

 

Illegal detention of WU Guizun for more than a hundred days

 

On 22 May Wu Guizun and nearly 200 workers from Diweixin homeware factory located in Shenzhen were arrested by the anti-riot police on the way to petition the Shiyan district government. They were asking the government to intervene in the one-month long severance negotiation with their employer which was closing down business for relocation from its Shenzhen plant to Huizhou city. Few days after the arrest, the factory management terminated the negotiation with the workers and sacked all the representatives including Wu Guizhun. Since his detention on 22 May, Wu was denied free access to his lawyer and family. He is likely to be criminalized and charged by the public security for “assembling a crowd to disturb public order”.

 

Twelve security guards protesting at the First Hospital of Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine were put under criminal detention

 

In the second case, the security guards and more than a hundred sanitation workers had staged a sit-in at the First Hospital of Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine since March. They were employed by the labour agencies affiliated to the hospital and had worked there for more than ten years without a proper employment contract, unequal remuneration, social security and leave protection. These workers were sacked by the labour agencies which were closing down business in March before the revised Labour Contract Law came into effect on 1 July 2013. By mid-August, the sanitation workers managed to claim their severance compensations but not the security guards. They were unable to negotiate with the hospital authority. Twelve of them were even arrested by the police in a clash on 19 August and detained for the criminal offence of disturbing public order on 20 August.

 

We regret to find that in both cases, the workers were alone in their struggle without receiving support from the trade union.

 

We are concerned that industrial actions taken by workers for claiming their legal rights were put under criminal detention and charged. Although strike is not protected in the domestic laws, freedom of assembly is protected in the PRC Constitution. As a ratified party to the ILO’s Declaration on the Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work and the Unite Nations’ International Covenant of Cultural, Economic and Social Rights, criminalization of workers’ right to strike should not be tolerated.

 

Your federation and the municipal federation of trade unions have been a supporter to resolving labour disputes by collective bargaining and more effective regulation of agency work. We urge the Guangdong Provincial FTU and the Shenzhen Municipal FTU to give pressure to the government for the release of Mr. Wu and the twelve security guards. Representatives elected by the workers for collective negotiation purposes should be protected from criminal liabilities, and their labour disputes should be settled in collective negotiation.

 

We also ask your trade unions to provide all the needed assistance to Mr. Wu and the twelve security guards and their families.

 

Yours Sincerely,