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Release and sentence reductions for Stella shoe factory workers
in China
Dear Friends,
Please
read the article below describing court proceedings and how a
combined international campaign helped free the jailed Stella
workers in China. The article was supplied by the China Labour
Bulletin and contains information about the court proceedings
as well as background information about the case.
Kind regards,
Clean Clothes Campaign
10 January 2004
Release and sentence reductions for Stella shoe factory workers
in China
At a criminal appeal court hearing on 31 December 2004, seven
Chinese shoe factory workers walked free in the southern city
of Dongguan, Guangdong Province, after their original sentences
of up to three-and-a-half years' imprisonment were reduced to
nine-months, suspended for one year. Three under-aged workers
were also released and their original suspended prison sentences
dropped. They had all been in jail since April 2004.
This reversal of the sentencing of the Stella International
shoe factory workers - all of whom had been involved in mass protests
at Stella's Xing Xiong and Xing Ang factories in late April 2004
- represents a significant landmark in the history of the modern
labour movement in China.
The Stella case demonstrates that principled and well-written
defence arguments by mainland Chinese lawyers, coupled with a
bold and well-coordinated campaign by concerned labour groups
and the international labour movement, can make a real difference
to the fate of detained Chinese worker activists, even in a case
involving major criminal charges.
China Labour Bulletin confirms that the new sentences handed
down by the Dongguan Intermediate People's Court on 31 December
2004 were as follows:
Xing Ang defendants: Wan Jiafeng, 20, Chen Nanliu, 24, Ma Changwei,
18, and Qu Pengtao, 21, were each sentenced to nine months' imprisonment,
suspended for one year. Wan was originally sentenced to three-and-a-half
years, and the other three to three years each. An under-aged
female worker, Chen Suo, 16, has been released, although her conviction
is sustained. She was originally given a two-year prison sentence,
suspended for three years.
Xing Xiong defendants: Ding Kui, 19, and Liu Rongneng, 19, were
each sentenced to nine months imprisonment, suspended for
one year. They were originally sentenced to three years. Two under-aged
workers, Geng Chunfei, 16, and Liu Haiyang, 16, were released,
although their convictions are sustained. They were each originally
sentenced to two years' imprisonment, suspended for three years.
However, one of the Xing Xiong shoe factory defendants, and
Lawyer Gao Zhisheng, whose law firm in Beijing represented six
of the workers, told CLB that they had not been informed beforehand
of the date of the appeal hearing, so they had not known that
the court would announce the sentence reductions on that day.
When Lawyer Gao's firm called the Dongguan Court to ask about
the appeal verdicts, he was brusquely told to wait for a copy
of the verdict to be mailed to him.
The defendants had been charged with "intentional destruction
of property" in connection with two mass protests involving
thousands of workers at the Xing Xiong and Xing Ang factories
owned by the Taiwanese company Stella International on 21 and
23 April 2004 respectively. Excessive working hours, low pay,
frequent wage arrears and the poor quality of food provided at
the factories canteens were the triggers for the protests.
(For further information, see:
http://www.china-labour.org.hk/iso/article.adp?article_id=5913
and
http://www.china-labour.org.hk/iso/article.adp?article_id=5983)
The strikes were reported by the mainland media, and China Labour
Bulletin believes that the court's decision was in part a reaction
to the media, in particular a long analysis published by the China
News Weekly (Zhongguo Xinwen Zhoukan) on 25 October 2004. (For
CLB's translation of the news article, see:
http://www.china-labour.org.hk/iso/article.adp?article_id=6072)
In a rare move, the semi-official magazine highlighted Lawyer
Gao's argument in his defence statement for Chen Nanliu - one
of the Xing Ang workers - that the prosecuting authorities had
failed to prove that the workers' actions were in any way planned
or organized. It also quoted a labour expert in Guangdong as saying
that "workers should be allowed to organize themselves and
to have a legal channel to express their grievances"
a proposal that coincides with China Labour Bulletin's long-standing
advocacy that Chinese workers should be allowed to established
free and independent trade unions.
INTERNATIONAL LABOUR MOVEMENT PUT PRESSURE ON THE DONGGUAN
COURT
The Stella workers received international support. On 29 October
less than a week after the sentencing of the Xing Ang workers
the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU)
sent a letter to President Hu Jintao protesting against the sentences.
They also issued a press release on 2 November. The Netherlands-based
Clean Clothes Campaign sent letters to Stella International's
buyers, including Reebok and NIKE, urging them to write to the
Dongguan Court and the Stella management to plead for leniency
in the sentencing. At CLB's request, the CEO of Reebok himself
wrote to the Dongguan Court requesting leniency for the Stella
Ten; and we understand that Clark's shoe company did likewise.
After investigation into the workers' allegations of the factories'
abusive employment practices which had led to the protests, China
Labour Bulletin decided to provide full legal assistance to the
workers. The families of six of the ten detained workers agreed
to accept CLB's legal assistance. We then contacted Lawyer Gao,
who immediately agreed to take on the case and offered to handle
it free of charge, asking for only transportation and accommodation
costs for the six different lawyers required. Lawyer Gao made
a powerful defence speech at the trial of first instance on 25
August 2004 highlighting the underlying causes of the exploitative
working conditions that led to the Stella factory workers' protest,
namely the government's unqualified support for foreign investment
and its neglect of workers' rights and labour standards since
the start of China's economic reform over twenty years ago. (For
CLB's translation of Lawyer Gao's defence statement, see:
http://www.china-labour.org.hk/iso/article.adp?article_id=5801)
Although this case is a milestone on the journey towards workers'
rights in China, we should not forget that the appeal court still
maintains that the ten Stella workers are guilty of their alleged
offences. Instead of scapegoating individual workers in this way,
the Chinese authorities should address the real issue of why labour
unrest has become so widespread. Workers need to be able to establish
their own independent trade unions, so that they can voice their
grievances peacefully and negotiate with their employers on working
conditions, wages, health and safety, and other issues of vital
concern to workers around the country. China Labour Bulletin believes
that this is the best and only way to ensure workers' rights and
to reverse the rising tide of labour unrest and mass worker protests
in China today.
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