An old story took on a new twist this month as a group of Chinese migrants protested outside a real estate development to demand payment of overdue wages. The difference this time: The protesters were children and they were successful.
Tourism company Xinhua Shizhaizi has handed over 14 million yuan ($2.2 million) to a court in southwestern China's Yunnan province to cover debts owned in connection with a real estate project in the scenic city of Dali, the state-run Xinhua news agency said Wednesday. Included in that sum is 8 million yuan in wages owed to 500 migrant workers involved in construction of the project, according to Xinhua.
The news comes roughly a week after local media reported 13 children, ranging in age from five to 20, had lined up outside a shopping and tourism complex in Dali known as Nanguo City, holding hand-written signs demanding the complex's developer pay their parents.
'My name is Gao Jia,' read the sign held by one little girl. 'I want to eat, to go to school, to drink milk, to eat cookies.'
The appearance of the children appears to struck a chord with China's sometimes jaded Internet users, prompting new interest in an issue that had fallen out of the headlines in recent years.
Responsible for the actual work of building the country's shiny new urban skylines, China's migrant workers have long complained of exploitation at the hands of employers. Failure by real estate developers to pay migrant construction workers has led to a number of protests and worker suicides over the years. Though courts have sometimes sided with workers in wage disputes, labor experts say, they have little power to enforce their decision, particularly when developers are politically connected.
Public opinion appears to have made the difference in Dali, where Xinhua Shihaizi had been refusing to pay despite being ordered to settle its bills by a provincial court two months ago.
While conflicts over unpaid wages have become routine, the children's protest hovered near the top of Chinese search engine Baidu's trending topics list throughout the day on Friday and garnered widespread sympathy from Internet users.
'While [a lot of us] are living cotent and happy lives, there are millions out there with no food to eat, no milk to drink,' wrote one user of Sina Corp.'s Weibo microblogging service Weibo.
Not everyone was thrilled with the use of children, including a disapproving microblogger who asked: 'What kind of parent lets their five year-old demand their unpaid wages?'
Though the children undoubtedly made an impression, the workers' case may have been aided by anxious chatter in Beijing over the country's growing wealth gap. A blue book on the country's urbanization released last week by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences noted that the divide between urban and rural incomes had widened 26% since 1997, with urban residents now making five times as much on average as their rural counterparts.
On Wednesday, state media quoted a report by the state-backed Center for Rural Studies as saying inequality in China was approaching 'danger' levels.
With developers feeling the squeeze from a tightening credit environment and curbs on speculation, Dali may not be the last place we see migrant children carrying protest signs on their parents' behalf.
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