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View Full Version : Zambian miners shot by Chinese mine owners



Kiev Communard
22nd October 2010, 20:19
Some more "glorious socialist acts" from the "People's Republic" :cursing:!




Eleven miners were shot at the Chinese-owned Collum Coal Mine, in the Sinazongwe District of southern Zambia on October 15, while protesting against low wages and poor conditions. The miners had not been paid their salaries for the 11 days in September they were asked to stay away from the mine while there was no work to be done.

Two of the miners, Vincent Chengele, 20, and Simon Simwete, 28, were in a critical condition following the shooting.

Collum Mine Ltd. supplies coal to mines in the mineral-rich Copperbelt region and to Zambia’s largest cement producer, Lafarge. Marketing manager Danny Law called the shooting “an accident,” and claimed that two Chinese supervisors were attacked. “The miners attacked the employees”, he said. “They had no other choice but to shoot in the air. Several people were wounded, but it’s not serious.”

One of the victims, Madinda Siamubotu, speaking from his hospital bed, said that a group of miners from mine shafts 2 and 3 assembled to discuss and decide what to do about their grievances regarding their conditions of service. When the two supervisors saw the workers gathered outside the gate, they came out of their offices with shotguns and opened fire on them.

A Zambian police spokesman told the AFP news agency, “The workers were protesting against the poor working conditions when managers using shotguns started to shoot aimlessly, not in the air.”

The two supervisors have since been arrested and charged with attempted murder.

Concerned at reports in the Zambian media of a wave of opposition to Chinese investment in the country, the Chinese embassy in Lusaka directed Collum’s management to pay the medical bills for the 11 miners. It also told the management to pay the disputed September wages and to arrange “negotiations between the two parties for a fair and decent salary settlement”.

In return, the Zambian government carried out an investigation into what had happened and promised that miners who had “incited the riots” could be “brought to book”.

The shooting at Collum was not the first incident involving Chinese-owned mines in Zambia. In 2005, an explosion at a plant owned by China Nonferrous Metal Mining Group, on the same site as the Chambishi Copper Mines, killed 46 miners in one of the deadliest blasts in the nation’s history. A government inquiry found management responsible for disregarding safety measures at the plant, but the company was allowed to carry on working.

The following year, Chinese managers at Chambishi shot at least six miners during a wage protest. The investigation into this shooting was not made public.

In 2008, the water supply was polluted in Mufulira in the east of Zambia by the Mofani copper mine, putting many residents into hospital. Mining has established Zambia in the top 10 of the most polluted countries in the world.

The Collum miners are paid around US$70 a month. They complain they are treated like slave labour and are the worst paid in the mining industry. Copper miners get slightly more, around US$100 a month.

China has invested heavily in mining in Zambia, more than US$400 million last year alone. There are at least three Chinese-owned mining operations, as well as a 150,000-tonnes-a-year copper smelter.

Mining is the main industry, yielding 70 percent of Zambia’s export earnings. Falling copper prices have led to mine closures and thousands of redundancies. Last year, copper sales fell to US$2.9 billion from US$3.6 billion in 2008, an 18 percent drop. Government statistics show that output tonnage actually increased by 20 percent over the same period.


China stepped up investment during the recession when many other investors pulled out. However, in the recent period, there has been growth in the price of copper, and the Chinese have been well placed to exploit the situation.

The Zambian elite, as in many African countries, has been pleased to accept Chinese investment with “no strings” compared to Western investment with International Monetary Fund and World Bank conditions. Zambia’s finance minister, Ng’andu Magande, denies there is any problem with Chinese backing: “So far in Zambia, I haven’t seen the strings. If they are there, they are nylon ones. I don’t see them. They are very thin.”

However, ahead of next year’s elections, the main opposition leader, Michael Sata of the Patriotic Front (Zambia for Zambians), is exploiting the widespread opposition to harsh conditions in Chinese-owned mines. He campaigns on an anti-Chinese platform, alleging that China is funding Zambia’s ruling party.

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2010/oct2010/zamb-o22.shtml

Unfortunately, Zambian reaction to this seems to be right-populist Sinophobia, not anti-capitalism.

RedMaterialist
22nd October 2010, 20:36
Some more "glorious socialist acts" from the "People's Republic" :cursing:!


Unfortunately, Zambian reaction to this seems to be right-populist Sinophobia, not anti-capitalism.

Here is a quote from something called the Dow Jones Newswire: "According to Lungu, the Chinese embassy has urged the owner of the coal mine to consider paying better salaries to the Zambian workers to end the unrest."

I'm not sure if it is clear who owns the mine, the Chinese Government or a private Chinese company. The 'People's Republic" does not claim to own or control all the means of production, only the biggest. However, it does claim to be communist.

Dimentio
22nd October 2010, 20:42
Sounds terribly racist. I have a hard time imagining that they shoot Chinese workers in Chinese factories in China, even if the situation's there is almost as dehumanising.

Ocean Seal
22nd October 2010, 20:49
Some more "glorious socialist acts" from the "People's Republic" :cursing:!
Supporting the Nepalese King + Imperialism in Africa
Are they trying to overtake America in number of imperialist injustices?
Another imperial dictatorship, I hope that the workers wake up and realize how much worse its going to get so that they do something.

The Vegan Marxist
22nd October 2010, 21:11
To make things clear, this was an act done by a corporate company that operates within the SEZs of China. It's a vicious act of capitalist policies against Chinese workers & I, for one, want to see justice done against those who fired at these workers.

Obs
22nd October 2010, 22:46
To make things clear, this was an act done by a corporate company that operates within the SEZs of China. It's a vicious act of capitalist policies against Chinese workers & I, for one, want to see justice done against those who fired at these workers.
Why are there multinational corporations with headquarters in a socialist country?

Os Cangaceiros
22nd October 2010, 23:02
Why are there multinational corporations with headquarters in a socialist country?

Didn't you hear? It's all part of "China's NEP". :rolleyes:

Jazzhands
22nd October 2010, 23:22
That's some workers' state, huh? Don't you know all those miners were actually CIA agents sent to sabotage the Glorious Socialist Motherland as part of an anarcho-Trot conspiracy?:rolleyes:

Reznov
22nd October 2010, 23:29
Supporting the Nepalese King + Imperialism in Africa
Are they trying to overtake America in number of imperialist injustices?
Another imperial dictatorship, I hope that the workers wake up and realize how much worse its going to get so that they do something.

But but but they have a red flag and say they are communist!!!

Wake the fuck up, this "peoples republic" is already on par with Imperalism & America in my opinion.

It gets me so fucking angry, this is not what real Communists stand for :cursing:

penguinfoot
22nd October 2010, 23:39
I have a hard time imagining that they shoot Chinese workers in Chinese factories in China, even if the situation's there is almost as dehumanising.

Which shows just how naive you are! There is a long history in China of workers receiving much harsher punishments than students when they are involved in civil disobedience.

The Vegan Marxist
23rd October 2010, 00:13
Didn't you hear? It's all part of "China's NEP". :rolleyes:

You're an idiot if you think any of those who see China as a workers state saw the implementation of the SEZs as a form of "NEP". The SEZs were a result to "market socialism". Some private businesses should've been let in to get China out of a underdeveloped economical state, but of course, it was kept to continue. Leading to capitalists being allowed into the party by 2001, bringing about a 17 million membership increase since then. Deng was a revisionist, & a centrist.

Os Cangaceiros
23rd October 2010, 01:20
:lol:

Wow. You're a case.

RedMaterialist
23rd October 2010, 03:11
Why are there multinational corporations with headquarters in a socialist country?

It was either Marx or Lenin (who else?) who said that the capitalists will sell the ropes to their hangmen; also capitalists create their own gravediggers (the last definitely by Marx.)

Os Cangaceiros
23rd October 2010, 03:14
Yep, I'm sure that deep within the minds of the Chinese leadership there's still a burning desire to "hang the capitalists with their own rope".

It's just a shame that so many peasants and workers have been getting in the way of this master plan during the last couple of years. :(

DaringMehring
23rd October 2010, 05:30
China right now has far more to do with the kind of bureaucratic mercantilism that characterized the last several dynasties, than with socialism.

-In solidarity with the shot Zambians.