Delegates to the ongoing 14th National Congress of Chinese Trade
Unions have called for greater attention to the protection of the
rights of workers.
The delegates said many employees had been laid off when
state-owned companies were trying to increase efficiency by cutting
their work forces, resulting financial difficulties for those who
lost their jobs.
Although the central government has issued a series of policies
to protect the interests of the layoffs, some enterprises had
failed to carry out the policies, they said. The situation was
worse in cities where state-owned factories were dominant.
In Anshan, a largest steel production base in Liaoning Province,
northeast China, some 140,000 state factory employees have so far
lost their jobs in the city's efforts to restructure the difficult
state sector. The city has more than one million people working for
state-owned companies.
Employees in these companies are often owed unpaid wages. Local
trade unions are trying hard to help them.
Since 2001, the municipal federation of trade unions in Anshan
has helped factory workers recover more than 900 million yuan
(US$110million) in unpaid salaries from their employers.
Labor disputes caused by state enterprise reform have been the
main job for trade unions," said Wu Shenyao, president of the
municipal federation of trade unions of Shanghai.
In 2002, 26 percent of disputes involved difficult relations
between workers and employers. Trade unions have tried hard to
persuade the factories to abide by law and protect the interests of
employees.
"Most of the disputes were settled after unions were involved,"
Shen noted.
(Xinhua News Agency September 26, 2003)