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  1. #1
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    Chinese Child Slavery "Not Limited to Brickyards"

    "At most of the brick kilns, she found child slaves who were forced into hard labour. Some were so young that they still wore their school uniforms as they toiled. When they were too exhausted to push carts of bricks, they were whipped."

    "The children were forced to work as many as 14 hours a day in cruel conditions with little food. Some were beaten by their bosses. Others were burned by hot bricks as they worked. Some of the children have spent up to seven years in slavery."

    globeandmail.com: World

    Hundreds of Chinese children have been kidnapped and forced to work as slaves in brutal conditions.

    President Hu Jintao and the prime minister, Wen Jiabao, have intervened to call for urgent efforts to trace hundreds more boys and young men who are still feared missing despite raids on brick factories across north and central areas of the country.

    The reports of children being abducted, locked in factories for years, beaten, left untreated for severe burns and, in some cases, killed spread this week from a single case in Shanxi province to implicate hundreds of kilns.

    It took a campaign by parents, who in some cases led raids to rescue their children themselves, before official action was taken. They say at least 1,000 children, as well as adults, have been abducted.

    Reporters have alleged that collusion between the kiln owners and local officials blocked intervention. In the first case discovered, the owner was the son of the local Communist Party boss.

    In that first case, a group of labourers were found after being locked in a factory for years and forced to live off bread and water. One was reported to have been killed.

    In raids on other kilns, boys as young as eight told of seeing friends beaten and killed, and, in the case of two young men, deliberately buried alive.

    The state news agency said a group of 251 slave labourers had so far been rescued from Shanxi, while 217 had also been rescued in neighbouring Henan province.

    Child slaves found in China's brick factories | International News | News | Telegraph
    Has been going on for many years.

    China was shocked by the recently televised images of weakened children and adults that were forced to work as slaves in Shanxi province brick yards. But this particular scandal, which even made it to state-run media, may just be the tip of the iceberg. All over China, children and young men are missing.



    Ordeal over:
    some of more than
    500 workers, some of them children,
    rescued from brickyards in Shanxi
    and Henan province in recent days.
    Around 170 people have been arrested
    for their involvement in the slave trade.


    Last week, the police freed 568 people that worked as slaves in Henan en Shanxi provinces. Some of the liberated slaves are suffering from mental illness. 168 people were arrested in the case.

    But this local success story does not solve China's slavery problem. China's increasing demand for building materials and fuel is causing a need for cheap labour in brick yards and often illegally operated coalmines. Previous investigations show that males around the age of fifteen are considered to be the most suitable to be forced into slavery. They are physically strong but can still easily be intimidated.

    But it's not only the brickyards and coalmines that make use of young slaves. Male babies are sold to childless couples. And it's not males only either that are victimized. Young girls also are sold as domestic slaves, prostitutes or child brides.

    Shelter

    Margaret Ward is a nurse with the 'Xinxing Aid for Homeless Children in Baoji'. Many children that have escaped slave traders end up in this shelter in Central China.

    "Recently we had an eleven year old boy who escaped from a brick yard. But many children are also forced to work in restaurant kitchens."
    According to Ms Ward the slave traders are specifically looking for children from rural areas.

    "Their parents often work in the city, and the children are raised by family. Often they are neglected, they are fed only once a day and they watch a lot of television. They have a naïve perception of life in the big city and they are easily conned by slave traders."

    Violence

    The traders often find their victims at bus and train stations, but Ms Ward says that some kids are violently abducted. The price for a child slave is around 500 yuan (50 euro). One boy from Xinjiang in the Northwest of the country only remembers being hit over the head as a smelly cloth was pushed against his nose. He came to in a moving train somewhere in central China.

    According to Ms Ward the children are forced to obey their owners.
    "Sometimes boiling water is poured over their legs or they are being tied up. Also they are threatened that their families may get hurt. Since many of the children don't have any id cards they're afraid to go to the police."

    Publicity

    An article published in China Business News purportedly confirms the
    suspicion that the police are bribed by slave traders. Chinese Internet forums are calling for punishment of the involved officials.
    But Beijing is also trying to sooth the unrest. Last week the 'Internet Bureau' called on Chinese news websites to remove 'harmful information aimed at attacking the party.

    Child slaves found in China's brick factories | International News | News | Telegraph

  2. #2

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    dirtydog's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Hootad Binky
    Some were so young that they still wore their school uniforms as they toiled
    They have some gogo bars like that in Pattaya, although the girls do look a bit too old to be going to school though.

  3. #3
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    It seems curious to me that the article and the concern seem to be mostly or only for Chinese males that are in the slavery system. As if it isn't famous that Chinese girls are sold as sex slaves, which is probably worse than making building materials all day. And I don't think the sex slaves get paid any better, get better food or living conditions, or have a better future in front of them.

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by ILoveDogs
    And I don't think the sex slaves get paid any better, get better food or living conditions, or have a better future in front of them.
    At least they get to lay around in bed all day.

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