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Antifa94
29th May 2010, 04:04
FOSHAN, China — After years of being pushed to work 12-hour days, six days a week on monotonous low-wage assembly line tasks, China’s workers are starting to push back.
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Workers Squeezing Honda With Especially Costly Strike (May 29, 2010)
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A strike at an enormous Honda transmission factory here in southeastern China has suddenly and unexpectedly turned into a symbol of this nation’s struggle with income inequality, rising inflation and soaring property prices that have put home ownership beyond the reach of all but the most affluent.

And perhaps most remarkably, Chinese authorities are letting the strike happen — in a very public way.

In the kind of scene that more often plays out at strikes in America than at labor actions in China, print and television reporters from state-controlled media across the country have started covering the walkout here, even waiting outside the nearly deserted front gate on Friday in hope of any news.

Until now, the authorities had been leery of letting the media report on labor disputes, fearing that it could encourage workers elsewhere to rebel. The new permissiveness, so far at least, coincides with growing sentiment among some officials and economists that Chinese workers deserve higher wages for their role in the country’s global export machine.

And without higher incomes, hundreds of millions of Chinese will be unable to play their part in the domestic consumer spending boom on which this nation hopes to base its next round of economic growth.

“This is all because there is a major political debate going on about how to deal with the nation’s growing income gap, and the need to do something about wages,” said Andreas Lauffs, a lawyer at Baker & McKenzie who specializes in Chinese labor issues.

If wages do rise, that could bring higher prices for Western consumers for goods as diverse as toys at Wal-Mart and iPads from Apple.

The Chinese media may also have found it a little easier, politically, to cover this strike because Honda is a Japanese company, and anti-Japanese sentiment still simmers in China as a legacy of World War II. Certainly, the strike is hitting Honda hard, as the resulting shortage of transmissions and other engine parts has forced the company to halt production at all four of its assembly plants in China.

Honda has an annual capacity of 650,000 cars and minivans in China, like Jazz subcompacts for export to Europe and Accord sedans for the Chinese market. Because Honda’s prices in China are similar to what it charges in the United States, the cars tend to be far out of reach financially for most of the workers who make them.

A Honda spokeswoman declined to discuss specific issues in the strike negotiations.

The intense media coverage may evoke historical memories of the 1980 shipyard strike in Gdansk, Poland, that gave rise to the Solidarity movement and paved the way for the fall of Communism in Eastern Europe. But the reality here is much different.

Instead of tens of thousands of grizzled and angry shipyard workers, the Honda strike involves about 1,900 mostly cheerful young people. And the employees interviewed say their goal is more money, not a larger political agenda.

“If they give us 800 renminbi a month, we’ll go back to work right away,” said one young man, describing a pay increase that would add about $117 a month to an average pay that is now around $150 monthly. He said he had read on the Internet of considerably higher wages at other factories in China and expected Honda to match them with an immediate pay increase.

Many workers at other factories in southeastern China already earn $300 a month, but they do so only through considerable overtime. And even that higher income is not enough to embark on the middle-class dream in China of owning a small apartment and subcompact car. Officially, though, the government is discouraging heavy reliance on overtime, and workers here said that Honda was not assigning much.

The strikers said that Honda mainly hired recent graduates of high schools or vocational schools. And so, most are in their late teens or early 20s, representing a new generation of employees, many of whom had not been born when the Chinese authorities suppressed protests by students and workers in Tiananmen Square in 1989 — a watershed event whose 21st anniversary falls next Friday.

The profile of striking workers seems to run more along the lines of slightly bookish would-be engineers — perhaps without the grades or money to attend college — rather than political activists. Besides their low wages, the workers seem focused on issues like the factory’s air-conditioning not being cool enough, and the unfairness of having to rise from their dormitories as early as 5:30 for a 7 a.m. shift.
Workers said that in addition to their pay, they also received free lodging in rooms that slept four to six in bunk beds. They also get free lunches, subsidized breakfasts for the equivalent of 30 cents and dinners for about $1.50.
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Workers Squeezing Honda With Especially Costly Strike (May 29, 2010)
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The striking employees said that some senior workers, known as team leaders, had allied themselves with management. But they insisted that the rank-and-file workers were solidly in favor of walkout — a claim impossible to verify.

Although China is run by the Communist Party and has state-controlled unions, the unions are largely charged with overseeing workers, not bargaining for higher wages or pressing for improved labor conditions. And they are not allowed to strike, although China’s laws do not have explicit prohibitions against doing so.

Workers at the Honda factory dormitory said that the official union at the factory was not representing them but was serving as an intermediary between them and management. Li Jianming, the national spokesman for the All China Federation of Trade Unions, declined to comment.

The workers here have been on strike since May 21, with no resolution in sight. But the strike did not come to broader notice until Thursday and Friday as Japanese media began reporting the shutdown of Honda assembly plants, and as Chinese media and Internet sites were allowed to report extensively on those activities.

The unusually permissive approach of the authorities toward media coverage of the strike follows a decision to tolerate extensive coverage this month of suicides by workers at the Taiwanese-owned Foxconn factory complex in nearby Shenzhen that supplies Apple and Hewlett-Packard.

The official China Daily newspaper ran a lead editorial on Friday that cited the Honda strike as evidence that government inaction on wages might be fueling tensions between workers and employers. The editorial criticized the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security for not moving faster to draft a promised amendment to current wage regulations because of what the newspaper described as opposition from employers.

Zheng Qiao, the associate director of the department of employment relations at the China Institute of Industrial Relations in Beijing, said the strike was a significant development in China’s labor relations history because the workers appeared to be well organized and united.

“The strike at Honda is the largest strike that has ever happened at a single global company in China,” she said, adding that, “such a large-scale, organized strike will force China’s labor union system to change, to adapt to the market economy.”

It's a damn shame they aren't political.

RedStarOverChina
29th May 2010, 04:08
There's already a thread on this:
http://www.revleft.com/vb/huge-auto-workers-p1759370/index.html#post1759370





It's a damn shame they aren't political.

How can you not be political when you're having an organized protest?

Antifa94
29th May 2010, 04:41
It said they were only interested in money, not leftism change in industrial relations.
Sorry for posting a second thread.

China studen
30th May 2010, 19:19
Haha, my hometown in Foshan.

RedStarOverChina
30th May 2010, 19:20
Haha, my hometown in Foshan.
Could you please provide us with more details of the protest? 详细描述一下吧

Proletarian Ultra
30th May 2010, 20:24
How can you not be political when you're having an organized protest?

In the context of the article it looks like 'political' means 'pro-Western anti-Communist.'

So, if the strikers are phrasing their demands in terms of left-nationalism or neo-Maoism - respectively the dominant and fastest-growing ideologies among young Chinese workers - then that's not 'political'.

RedStarOverChina
30th May 2010, 20:43
So, if the strikers are phrasing their demands in terms of left-nationalism or neo-Maoism - respectively the dominant and fastest-growing ideologies among young Chinese workers - then that's not 'political'.
I think you're getting ahead of us. I do not believe that the dominant ideologies of Chinese workers are left-nationalism or Maoism.

It saddens me to admit, that the Chinese working class has experienced a rapid regression in terms of political consciousness since 1989. Now politically speaking people are very backward.

The Chinese worker's movement is in its infancy but I'm optimistic that it will grow and mature.

Proletarian Ultra
30th May 2010, 20:51
I think you're getting ahead of us. I do not believe that the dominant ideologies of Chinese workers are left-nationalism or Maoism.

It saddens me to admit, that the Chinese working class has experienced a rapid regression in terms of political consciousness since 1989. Now politically speaking people are very backward.

The Chinese worker's movement is in its infancy but I'm optimistic that it will grow and mature.

"Damn Japs aren't paying me enough" is what I was thinking of - maybe 'left-nationalism' is overstating it. :( I don't know how far maoflag.net thinking has gone into the workers' movement, but it's exciting that the site's up and active.

China studen
3rd June 2010, 19:04
Could you please provide us with more details of the protest? 详细描述一下吧

Most workers have resumed.

This is an open letter to workers.
http://zggr.cn/?action-viewnews-itemid-9411

This is the site of solidarity with the left-wing workers letters. Inside Taiwan, Hong Kong, overseas and progressives.
http://zggr.cn/?action-viewnews-itemid-9397

Crux
3rd June 2010, 20:43
Hong Kong: Labour activists and socialists protest in solidarity with the Foshan Honda workers’ strike (video) (http://www.chinaworker.info/en/content/news/1074/)



Foshan Honda strike: struggle continues, solidarity with Honda workers

Tuesday, 1 June 2010.
Support Honda workers' struggle, support independent democratic trade unions

chinaworker.info and Socialist Action, Hong Kong

On 31 May (Monday), Foshan Honda workers' strike continued despite repression from the local government and the Japanese company.

http://www.chinaworker.info/get_img?NrArticle=1071&NrImage=9

According to reports from Honda workers who spoke to chinaworker.info, Honda proposed a third wage increase scheme on 29 May. Based on this package, trainee workers' wage will be raised RMB 634 per month, and formal employees' wages will be raised by over RMB 300. The company asked workers to sign a new contract promising to end their strike by 9.30 on 31 May. This pay increase is below what workers demanded, - an increase of RMB 800 per month for all workers. More important is that Honda refused to re-instate two workers sacked for involvement in the strikes. Therefore, workers refused Honda's proposal and continued the strike. Honda management's trap failed to break up workers' solidarity.

On 31 May, the factory management, teachers of trainee workers and local official union bureaucrats initiated a separate discussion with workers. They wanted to buy out supervisors and threaten trainee workers, that they will not get diplomas from technical schools, but most workers were not intimidated. They gathered outside of workshop and chanted slogans to "continue to strike!"

At 15.00 on 31 May, the local government sent dozens of riot police to the factory. In addition, the local official union (a subsidiary of the one-party dictatorship) sent over 100 security guards and thugs to the Foshan factory under the pretext of "helping negotiations". These people from the official union wore identical yellow caps. Arguments ensued and the "union representatives" assaulted workers - their violent repression causing injury to half a dozen workers.

http://www.chinaworker.info/get_img?NrArticle=1071&NrImage=8

Although Honda Foshan workers are facing intensified threats and repression, the strike continues. They have raised six demands:

1. Monthly wage increases of 800 yuan, for all workers.
2. Long-term service bonus, increase of RMB 100 per month for each year employment.
3. Re-instate sacked workers and no any further repression or victimisation of workers.
4. Pay workers full pay for the duration of the strike.
5. Reply to workers' complaints and suggestions and improve services at the plant.
6. For new elections to re-elect the chairman of the relevant staff union.

chinaworker.info and Socialist Action (CWI in Hong Kong) fully support the Foshan Honda workers' strike. We urge socialists and trade unionists internationally to flood Honda management with protests against their refusal to meet workers' demands and blatant strike-breaking and anti-union actions.

Sample protest letter for individuals/organisations:

I/We express our serious concern over the Foshan Honda Company's actions in China and fully support the workers' struggle to defend their basic rights and win modest pay rises. In support of workers at Foshan Honda, we demand your corporation and the Chinese government immediately communicate with workers and accept their demands.

Immediate reinstatement of dismissed workers - no victimisation of any worker for participation in the strike
Pay all due wages to workers, including wages for the period of the strike
Protest against the action of local government, puppet trade union and police to repress Honda workers
Support workers' right to organize an independent and democratically controlled trade union

Please send your protest to these target email addresses:
Honda Motor (China) Investment Co., Ltd
E-mail: [email protected]
Address: East Third Ring Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing Development Building 5, Room 301, Post Code: 100004
Tel: 86 - 010 - 65909020

Foshan City Government Office
E-mail: [email protected]
Address: Foshan Lingnan Road, Building 17, North 12; Post Code: 528000;
Tel :0757-83320934 Fax :0757-83321424

pranabjyoti
4th June 2010, 02:12
I just have sent my own e-mail to the workers. I am requesting others to take action against the repression of Foshan Honda workers. Comrades, organize your organization in support and solidarity with the struggling workers of Foshan Honda and if you can not, then at least send a personnel e-mail like me.
THIS IS THE TIME OF ACTION.