During a widespread crackdown, Chinese police have rescued over
200 people who had been forced to work as "slaves" in brick
kilns.
Police in central Henan Province have rescued 217 people,
including 29 children, and detained 120 suspects after a 4-day
campaign involving more than 35,000 police to check 7,500 kilns in
the province.
In the area around Xinxiang, north of Zhengzhou, police raided
20 brick kilns on Saturday and rescued 23 people including 16
children.
Laborers had been enticed or kidnapped and transported to the
kilns by human traffickers. Upon arrival they were beaten, starved,
and forced to work long hours without pay.
In the past two weeks, Chinese media have exposed the plight of
children held captive in brick kilns in neighboring Shanxi Province
and photos of distraught parents have appeared in the press.
It is reported that 400 Henan fathers went to the remote
mountains in Shanxi to track down missing sons who they believe
were sold to kilns.
Qin Yuhai, vice governor and police chief of Henan, said "we
must do everything we can to fight human trafficking and rescue
those being held captive."
In north China's Shanxi Province, police have rescued 31 people
who were forced to work under extremely cruel conditions in brick
kilns and detained five suspects.
Wang Bingbing, owner of an illegal brick kiln, and four
accomplices, were detained after police found they held captive 32
people who had been abducted or lured from railways stations in
Henan and Shanxi.
Nine of the 32 were mentally disabled. One worker, born as
mentally handicapped, was beaten to death last November, local
police said.
Guarded by a taskmaster and dogs, they were forced to work 15 to
16 hours per day, and finish their meals of steamed bread and water
within 15 minutes. The workers sleep on the ground in a dark room
without a heating system in the freezing winter.
Police are still hunting for another suspect from Henan.
The kiln was based in Caosheng Village of Hongtong County. Wang
was the son of a village head, according to Wang Xingwang, deputy
chairman with the provincial workers' union.
The kiln's bank accounts have been frozen.
Yang Aizhi, a 46-year-old mother, was one of the people who
alerted the public to the scandal.
Her 16-year-old son went missing on March 8 and she has been
searching for him ever since. On her travels she heard that the
child might have been kidnapped and forced to work at kilns in
Shanxi.
Yang went to more than 100 kilns in Shanxi and discovered that
"most kilns were forcing children to do hard labor," she was quoted
as saying in the Southern Weekly. Some children were still wearing
their school uniforms.
When the children were too tired to push carts, they were
whipped by taskmasters, said Yang.
Yang tried to rescue some of the children but was threatened by
kiln owners. She has yet to find her son.
Yang and other parents who suspect their children have been
kidnapped and forced to work in illegal kilns told their story to a
TV station in Zhengzhou in early May.
Zhang Wenlong was one of the 31 people rescued from the kiln in
Caosheng village. Zhang, 17, called the kiln where he had worked a
"prison.”
Zhang says he was abducted in March from the Zhengzhou Railway
Station and worked at a kiln for three months until he burned his
hand on bricks that had not yet cooled.
Zhang was watched by thugs and six ferocious dogs, making it
impossible to escape.
His taskmaster refused him hospital treatment but provided
medicines that had expired.
The county government has allocated 200,000 yuan (US$26,300) to
provide a salary to the victims.
Nine of the rescued have returned home and government officials
are accompanying 15 others to their homes. Seven of the people who
were rescued have disappeared as police believe they may have been
so traumatized they simply fled.
The crackdown campaign was launched in 11 cities of Shanxi.
There have been raids on coal mines, brick kilns, private
contractors, and small-sized enterprises after media reports
revealed that hundreds of children in Henan Province had been
kidnapped and forced to work in kilns in Shanxi.
(Xinhua News Agency June 15, 2007)