Dozens of deputies to the Second Session of the 10th National
People's Congress (NPC) are calling for better protection of the
rights and interests of farmers working in cities. They say that
people should not forget the sweat and labor of those who helped
build today's urban prosperity with their calloused hands.
"In view of some current unfair treatment that
farmers-turned-workers face, I see every reason for a new law to
ensure them equal footing with their urban counterparts," said Wang
Yuancheng, an NPC deputy from east China's Shandong Province.
Wang initiated a motion calling for a new law to safeguard the
rights and interests of farmers now working in cities. More than 30
NPC deputies have endorsed the motion.
Wang, who was born to a farming family himself, is a self-made man
who is now a successful entrepreneur. He has investigated the labor
markets in Beijing and in the Shandong Province cities of Tai'an
and Jinan.
He
said he has seen firsthand that the migrant workers' situations
have improved since last year with the revocation of a decades-old
regulation that called for compulsory detention and deportation of
people without local residence cards, and a move led by Premier Wen
Jiabao himself to recover unpaid wages. At least farmers now can
walk downtown and no longer feel helpless in the forests of
skyscrapers they see, Wang said.
However, Wang noted that many still face problems, such as decent
social security and housing to replace the shabby shelters most of
them now must live in.
The education of their children also remains a problem, said Xu
Jinglong, an NPC deputy from east China's Anhui Province. Some of
the children of farmers working in cities have been kept out of
school owing to the excessively high costs they face simply because
they do not have city residence cards.
Some 9.3 percent of the 20 million children of migrant farmers are
dropouts.
Two-thirds of the 87 million people in Zigong, located in southwest
China's Sichuan Province, are farmers. Because of limited local
agricultural resources, over 6 million of them have left their
hometown to work in cities elsewhere in China. In the past several
years, they have remitted on average 2.6 billion yuan (US$314
million) each year back to the province. Last year, 73 percent of
the increase in net incomes of Zigong farmers came from their work
in cities.
The mayor of Zigong, NPC deputy Luo Linshu, said he can do more
than just sign a motion to help the workers.
To
in recognition of the migrant workers' contribution to local
economic development, Luo said the Zigong government is obliged to
help safeguard their legitimate rights and interests in the places
where they work.
For example, Zigong will dispatch officials to visit its farmers
working in such cities as Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou to see if
they can solve some of their problems through intergovernmental
talks.
"Many of our farmers working outside want us to help them with
governmental intervention in labor disputes in the cities where
they work," Luo said.
Total nationwide wages in arrears for migrant farmers is estimated
at around 100 billion yuan (US$12.1 billion).
The Zigong government also plans to increase organized training of
farmers before they leave for urban jobs. The training should
include basic legal information in addition to occupational skills
in case the farmers need legal weapons to protect themselves, Luo
said.
Major cities that become the second homes of migrant workers are
now adopting a friendlier attitude.
NPC deputy and Guangdong Governor Huang Huahua said that Guangdong
will adopt a new local regulation especially to safeguard the
rights and interests of farmers-turned-workers in the near
future.
The regulation includes clauses requiring severe punishment for
those failing to pay salaries to farmers on time and in full,
establishment of a special fund to ensure that no migrant workers
go hungry, and improved education for children, Huang said.
(China Daily March 15, 2004)
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