Clearwisdom Collection: Special Collection - Exposing Slave Labor Practices Inside Chinese Labor Camps Part I
(Clearwisdom.net)
1. The story behind making China's "Sanitary" Chopsticks -- Exposing Slave
Labor Practices Inside Chinese Labor Camps (Part 1)
(Clearwisdom.net)
In China's small roadside restaurants, the widely used disposable chopsticks
are referred to as "sanitary" chopsticks. They are commonly seen in Chinese
restaurants overseas. You can see them placed together in a container or
packaged separately and labeled "Sanitized For Your Safety!" According to a
survey in China, over 80% of those chopsticks have never been sanitized. Fierce
market competition has made it impossible to cover all the costs, so some
businesses have omitted the sanitizing process. Others burn sulfur to make the
chopsticks look bright and white even though they know it could make the
chopsticks toxic. In order to minimize costs and increase profit, some
manufacturing jobs are subcontracted out to prisons and forced labor camps where
there are no controls put on sanitary conditions.
1. China's "Sanitary" chopsticks and forced labor camps.
(1) The "Sanitary" chopsticks production in Beijing's City Labor Education
Bureau
There is evidence that the Department of Dispatch of Beijing's City Labor
Education Bureau, a forced labor camp located in Daxing County, Beijing, forced
people in the labor camp to work excessive long hours to make "sanitary"
chopsticks, from 6:00am to 9:00pm or sometimes even past midnight. The
chopsticks made there were far from being "sanitary". With dozens of inmates
squeezed into one small room, the chopsticks to be packed were piled on the
floor arbitrarily and often stepped on by workers. The inmates' job was to put
the chopsticks into paper coverings labeled by the Department of Sanitary and
Epidemic Prevention, though the inmates had not gone through any measures of
epidemic prevention or sanitary conditions themselves. Many of them had skin
diseases, scabies outbreaks, and some were drug addicts or diagnosed with
sexually transmitted diseases. The payment for the contracted forced labor
became income for the policemen at the labor camps.
Falun Gong practitioner Mr. Yu Ming, former head of a clothing manufacturer
in Liaoyang City of Liaoning Province, wrote, "In the Tuanhe Forced Labor Camp
in the Daxing District of Beijing City, the Department of Dispatch forced
everyone to work from early morning to midnight to make money for the policemen.
Most of the work was packaging disposable 'Sanitary' or 'Convenient Chopsticks'
in paper wrappers. They were then regarded as meeting "Sanitary Quality
Standard" and sold to small roadside restaurants. The profit for one box of
chopsticks is about 6 yuan. Each inmate finishes about 3 boxes per day and there
are about 160 people per unit. You can imagine how much money one unit can make
for those policemen each day." [reference:
http://www.minghui.org/mh/articles/2004/2/8/66823.html] Mr. Yu also wrote,
"The inmates' dormitories were used as the workshops. They were very crowded to
begin with, now the chopsticks were thrown all over the floor. Sometimes they
were dropped into the open toilet, but nobody cared. They would just pick the
chopsticks up and put them in the paper wappers, since the total number of
chopsticks could not be short, by even one. The police watched the inmates
carefully on the numbers, but inmates were never required to wash their hands.
The majority of the inmates were drug addicts and prostitutes, yet there were no
formal medical examinations here regardless of whether a person was carrying
hepatitis or sexually transmitted diseases. Any inmate still breathing was
forced to work for the police. Even those people who had scabies all over their
bodies were forced to work and grabbed the chopsticks with hands covered by
scabies infections." "Anyone behind schedule or failing to complete the
policemen's quota was beaten by the police and other inmates, forced to stand
still outside for long periods, or deprived of sleep as punishment for not
meeting their production quota. Every unit and every cell was crawling with lice
and the inmates were not allowed to take showers for long periods. Guards
patrolled, carrying electric stun batons and handcuffs. Many inmates never dared
to raise their heads to look at the sky after being here for months."
Falun Gong practitioner Mr. Gong Chengxi was a senior in college, majoring in
administration and management at the Changping Campus of Beijing Political and
Law University. Once the chairman of the student association and head of his
class, he was regarded as a righteous and kind student with excellent academic
integrity. Due to the persecution against Falun Gong, he was summarily
discharged from school when he would not renounce his belief. (Reference:
http://www.clearwisdom.net/emh/articles/2004/2/20/45228.html)
In the account he wrote to Clearwisdom.net, Mr. Gong revealed the persecution
against Falun Gong practitioners by the Department of Dispatch in Beijing. He
also mentioned the "Sanitary" chopsticks: (In early morning of the Chinese New
Year Day, January 23, 2001, four other Falun Gong practitioners and I were
handcuffed and put into a police vehicle at the Changping Detention Center. We
were escorted to the Department of Dispatch for Forced Labor Personnel in
Beijing near the Tuanhe Forced Labor Camp in Daxing District. Several days
later, we were asked to do the work of hand-wrapping disposable chopsticks.
Although the packaging was labeled "sanitary" it was not sanitary at all. All
the inmates including those who had hepatitis and sexually transmitted diseases
had to do this job. We were not asked or allowed to wash our hands before
working. In a room crowded with about 40 people, the chopsticks were piled all
over the floor and on the beds. The room was filled with sawdust. The sanitary
conditions in the Department of Dispatch were extremely poor. Everyone was given
only a few minutes of toilet and wash time in the morning and evening. As soon
as you sat down in the restroom, the police might already be shouting and
calling everyone to go out and form lines. We were not allowed to take showers
for extended periods. Only after the camp authorities discovered that many
inmates had lice all over their bodies, were we allowed to take our first
shower. Still, dozens of people were sent into a room with only two showers, for
no more than a few minutes. In the summer of 2002, a hepatitis epidemic broke
out in the Department of Dispatch...)
According to Mr. Gong' testimony, "In order to maximize the profit from the
inmates' work, the department of dispatch bordered on madness. The quota for
each person per day was 7,500 to over 10,000 pairs of chopsticks. Even working
from 6:00am to 12:00am, it was impossible to finish the quota. Besides the
unbearable pain in one's back and lower back, we also had to endure verbal abuse
and beatings from the police and their aids. During my one month in the
department of dispatch, each day was like that. Several elderly Falun Gong
practitioners, Dao Wanhui, Yang Juhai, Li Xieliang, Chen Jingjian and Jia Lin,
worked as fast as they could but still could not finish the quota, so the unit
head ordered them to sit on the cement floor outside to work for several hours
in icy weather. If they still failed to complete the quota, they were be
deprived of sleep, and only allowed 3-4 hours a night."
Jing Yuan also provided inside information about the dispatch department of
Beijing City Labor Education Bureau, "In the department of dispatch, inmates are
required to get up at 6:00 am. Late risers are beaten. There are roll calls
twice daily after getting up in the morning and before going to bed at night.
During roll call, inmates are ordered to cover their head with their hands and
squat down on the floor. Anyone who did not exhibit the correct posture was
beaten. After the morning roll call, practitioner's were permitted to use the
toilet and wash. There were only 5-6 toilets in a restroom shared by over 30
people. Using the toilet there is known as 'Squat-cleanup-standup" and you're
limited to several seconds. Those wishing to use the toilet had to get
permission from the head of the cell. If he wasn't happy, then you could forget
about being permitted to go to the restroom. It was even worse if the cell heads
wanted to use the restroom, since those people would occupy it for a long time.
Not all the faucets in a restroom were functional and the police limited the
water flow so that it only dribbled out when the faucet was turned on. Of the
more than 30 people in a cell, the head of the cell certainly had the privilege
to go first. The total time for toilet use and washing was only 10 minutes for
all inmates, with everyone scrambling and competing to get a stall. Those who
were not very aggressive had no chance to wash or use the toilet. The same was
true with taking showers. It was common for new arrivals to miss their chance to
use the toilet or take a shower. In the hot summer, bodies would begin to smell
very bad after 7-8 days with no shower."
Jing Yuan also wrote, "In the Department of Dispatch, as long as it was not
raining, everyone would squat down and eat outside. (It is reported that since
October, 2001 they started eating inside instead.) Before the meal, everyone was
required to recite a paragraph from the No. 23 Order and Report. At mid-day in
the summer heat, a bunch of people squatting down with the burning sun on their
heads bit into hard buns and drank vegetables soup infested with maggots,
sweating like dogs. They had 5 minutes to finish the meal. If anyone did not
finish the meal, he had to drop the bowl."
Jing Yuan said, "In the day time, most of the work is packaging the
chopsticks with paper bags labeled "Sterilized in high temperature" or "Sanitary
chopsticks". The hands that touched the chopsticks were extremely dirty and
never washed, even after using the toilet or wiping the nose. It was difficult
to get water to drink, let alone water for washing hands. The chopsticks fell
all over the dirty beds and floor. Anyone who had ever visited such a place
would never dare to use so-called 'sanitary chopsticks'. One would feel nauseous
just recalling how the chopsticks were packed.. The quota for each day was very
high. One had to start working right after getting up. There was no lunch break
and the finishing time was normally around 7:00 or 8:00 pm, sometimes even
midnight. Regular inmates also had to help the head of the cell for his quota.
Several cell heads did not work at all, making it tougher for others.
(2) The Sanitary Chopsticks and BBQ picks made in Tianjin City Shuangkou
Forced Labor Camp
In a letter to Clearwisdom.net, a Falun Gong practitioner who was once
detained in Tianjin City Shuangkou Forced Labor Camp wrote, "Because of the
terrible living condition in the forced labor camp, 90 percent of the inmates
developed scabies. At that time, my legs, chest and hands were all infected.
Still, we were forced to work."
The letter continued, "Policemen arranged for me to put sanitary chopsticks
into the paper wrapper or sometimes make vegetarian kabobs with bamboo skewers.
Many practitioners in the workshop had scabies. Some had yellowish liquid from
the infection under their nails, which spread directly onto the food and skewers
since nobody was allowed to wear gloves. The labor camp did not care about Dafa
practitioners' lives nor the health of the consumers. Such products were not
sanitary at all. Ironically, food and fire-proof curtains made of fiber glass
were being made at the same time in the same shop, and the room was filled with
fiber glasses particles. For one period of time, I was making a dishwashing
product. The normal quota for one person was 170 pieces per day, but they made
us produce 390 pieces per day. Those who were not nimble had to work almost
until early morning in order to finish the quota. When the 'superiors' came to
inspect, the policemen just wrote down 170 pieces in the record and let everyone
get off work on time, but then made them get up to work at 2:00am the next day.
For those practitioners who refused to cooperate, the police just arbitrarily
increased their quota. Inmates in the labor camp were forced to work, like this,
receiving no compensation at all."
(3) The only sanitary standard for the chopsticks in Dalian Forced Labor Camp
is no hair mixed in the bag.
Dalian Forced Labor Camp in Dalian City, Liaoning Province also performed the
same work and they exported those chopsticks to Japan. It was said that the only
sanitary standard was no hair should be in the package.
Besides chopsticks, the Dalian Forced Labor Camp produced a series of low
cost items, including embroidered products, dry flowers, hand knitted hats or
cellular phone cases, selected beans, sea weed knots, plastic flowers, popsicle
sticks, coffee straws, hand made wool coats and buttons. The Shibali Forced
Labor Camp in Xuchang City, Henan Province made wigs, tapestries, garnitures and
embroidery. Inmates were forced to work long hours each day. For those who
failed to finish the quota, the labor camp had all kinds of torture, beyond the
imagination of the civilized world.
Chinese version available at
http://www.minghui.ca/mh/articles/2004/2/25/68449.html
2. Exposing Slave Labor Practices Inside Chinese Labor Camps (Part II)
B. The forced labor camps in China commonly use slave labor to make a large
variety of products
As major corporations around the world seek cheap labor, the forced labor
camps in China have increased their exploitation of detainees, using them for
slave labor. Falun Gong practitioners are no exception. Over the past four
years, Falun Gong practitioners, as well as other labor camp detainees, have
been forced to do slave labor.
As of mid-February 2004, at least 896 Falun Gong practitioners are known to
have been tortured to death for their belief in Truth-Compassion-Tolerance.
Thousands of others are being unlawfully detained and being forced to do
exhausting work, including packaging chopsticks, making toys for export, and
making hair products for Henan Rebecca Hair Products, Inc. in Xuchang City.
1. According to an eye-witness account by a Falun Gong practitioner from
Wuhan City published in February 2004 on Clearwisdom.net, officials at the Hewan
Forced Labor Camp in Wuhan City have for a long time forced detainees to make
products for export, including an eagle toy and a bear toy. The workshop starts
the day at 6:00 a.m. and stays open until 2:00 a.m. the next morning.
2. The people detained at Dashaping Detention Center in Lanzhou City have
only enough space to lie down on their side when sleeping, and for their daily
meals they are given only steamed buns and plainly cooked noodles. Despite the
terrible living conditions, the detainees are forced to do highly intensive
manual labor daily. According to Chinese laws, a detention center is a place
where suspects who have not been convicted are held temporarily, and they should
not be subjected to physical labor. However, everyone who is sent to this
detention center is forced to do slave labor and to work for the Zhenglin Melon
Seeds Corporation, a well-known company in Gansu Province.
The detainees at Dashaping Detention Center pick watermelon seeds in the
winter and remove the seed husks in the summer. They have to use their teeth to
continuously crack and remove the husks from the watermelon seeds, while
squatting in the same position for more than 10 hours a day. They are only
allowed to take a break when having meals. In the winter, people had to stay in
an open field to pick seeds. Many people have suffered frostbite, cracked skin
and scabies, and the watermelon seeds often get covered with blood and pus. In
the summer, cracking the husks breaks teeth and creates loosened teeth, swollen
lips and cracked fingernails, and sometimes causes the fingernails to break off.
The detention center authorities know this work is illegal, so they always order
the detainees to stop working and put the seeds in bags before reporters or
government inspectors come. The authorities would then hand out newspapers to
every detainee, who would pretend to be reading the paper. When visiting
reporters or inspectors left, the work would resume.
The detainees are not paid a penny for their work. The Zhenglin Watermelon
Seed Co. and the detention center joined forces in exploiting the detainees'
labor and split the profits between them. Within several years, the Lanzhou
Zhenglin Food Corporation became the largest production center in China for
making stir-fried food (seeds). In 1999, the company had a total sales of 460
million yuan [approximately $55,577,287 USD]. The corporation sold its
premier product, the hand-picked watermelon seeds, as export and sold them to
more than 30 countries worldwide, including the United States, Canada,
Australia, France, New Zealand and Southeast Asia.
The Xiguoyuan Detention Center in Lanzhou City and the Kefa Factory Prison
also participated in this unconstitutional exploitation of labor.
3. Henan Province's No. 3 Labor Camp, also called the Xuchang City Labor Camp
in Xuchang City, is located in Henan Province, where most of the Chinese hair
products are made. When the labor camp was short of funds and was about to be
shut down, many Falun Gong practitioners were abducted and were forced to make
hair products, which revived the labor camp's business.
Qu Shuangcai, Director of the No. 3 Labor Camp, brutally persecuted Falun
Gong practitioners and was favored by his superiors. In May 2003, he was
transferred to the Shibalihe Female Labor Camp in Zhenzhou City and promoted to
director of that labor camp. Right away he signed a contract with Henan Rebecca
Hair Products, Inc. located 120 miles away from the labor camp in Xuchang City.
He also instituted the use of straight jacket restraints to use in torturing
practitioners. Within several months of his arrival there, three female Falun
Gong practitioners were tortured to death.
Guard Shen Jianwei from the No. 3 Labor Camp often said, "A while back, when
the labor camp was short on funds and was about to be shut down, many Falun Gong
practitioners became available. The government allocated 20,000 yuan [$2,416
USD] to force each practitioner to renounce his belief in Falun Dafa." The
labor camp spent eight million yuan [$966,561 USD] worth of government
funding to construct residential buildings and encourages the guards to
persecute these practitioners. Right now, the labor camp is "buying" Falun Gong
practitioners from other places for 800 yuan each to use as slave laborers, to
increase the volume of products for the labor camp. At this labor camp, whoever
shouts "Falun Dafa is good!" is ordered to be tortured. [Note: 500 yuan is
equal to the average monthly salary of an urban worker in China.]
Recently, because Dafa practitioners inside and outside of China have exposed
the labor camp authorities' crimes, the number of orders received by the labor
camp has markedly decreased. Because of the loss in profit, the labor camp
authorities conceived a plan to deceive their clients with a show of false
kindness. They invited many business owners in the hair trade and other related
people to visit the No. 3 Forced Labor Camp on February 16, 2004, in an attempt
to cover up their crimes and to continue to make huge profits.
4. Whoever is sent to the Langfang City Detention Center learns that the
forced labor there is extremely intensive and difficult to endure. There are
always countless beans waiting to be picked and chopsticks waiting to be
wrapped. The project manager in charge assigns daily jobs to every detainee.
Detainees who are unable to finish their assignments are punished by either not
being allowed to sleep or by being given evening work. They are forced to work
over 12 hours each day. Many suffer from heatstroke during the hot summer from
working in poorly ventilated cells and not given adequate water. The only time
they get a break is when the upper level authorities come to visit or to inspect
the detention center. At that time, the officer tells everyone stop working and
takes the products away and hides them. All detainees then start cleaning the
cells and yards. Then they are ordered to sit down on the ground and recite the
detention center's rules and regulations. After the visitors leave, the
detainees are forced to begin their work again.
5. A Falun Gong practitioner who was detained at the Shuangkou Forced Labor
Camp in Tianjin City wrote in a letter to Clearwisdom.net,
"Because of the hostile living environment in this forced labor camp, 90%
of the detainees have scabies, a contagious skin disease caused by mites. At
that time my legs, chest, and hands were infected, but the camp still forced
us to perform slave labor.
The camp police arranged for me to package chopsticks into paper wrappers
or make vegetarian shish kabobs. In the food processing plant, many detained
practitioners got scabies, and some even had yellowish pus oozing out of the
blisters on their fingers. Without the use of gloves, the pus contaminated
the food and the chopsticks.
The forced labor camp pays no attention to the well being of the detained
practitioners. They also ignore the health issues of the consumers!
Obviously, the camp products are not sanitary. In the same workshop,
fire-retardant fiberglass was also manufactured, so there were bits and
pieces of fiberglass everywhere. For a period of time, I was binding brushes
for cooking utensils. The regular workload per person was usually 170, but
we were each assigned a quota of 390. A slower person would have to continue
working all day and night. Every time there was an inspection by outsiders
or a tour arriving, the labor camp police would keep the workload record as
170 pieces per person and we could be off duty in the late afternoon.
However, they would then wake us up at 2:00 a.m. to make up the lost slave
labor hours. They arbitrarily added to the workload of practitioners who
refused to cooperate with the camp instructors. The detainees at the forced
labor camp are worked to extreme exhaustion without any compensation."
6. The Jianxin Forced Labor Camp of Tianjin City was expanded especially for
persecuting Falun Dafa practitioners. Since the inception of the Sixth Division,
for female detainees, several hundred Dafa practitioners have been detained
there. Most were older than fifty years of age, the oldest practitioner being
seventy-three years old.
The labor camp forces Dafa practitioners to work for as long as 17-18 hours
each day. If they cannot finish their assigned workload, the Dafa practitioners
are not allowed to sleep; some of them even have to work through the night
without sleep for several days, or at most they are only allowed to sleep for
one or two hours a day. Many of the Dafa practitioners, especially the older
ones, began practicing Falun Gong in order to heal their illnesses and improve
their health. Because of the vicious environment in the camp, the practitioners
were forbidden from studying the Dafa books and from practicing the Falun Gong
exercises. Not only that, in addition to prolonged work hours and exhausting
work, they endured intolerable mental and physical pressure. That is the reason
why some practitioners suffered relapses of their original illnesses, which had
been cured before they were detained in the labor camps.
One older woman with the surname Li had a high blood pressure reading of over
200 and had serious heart problems, but was still forced to finish her daily
assigned workload. One night at midnight, she collapsed in the bathroom. They
tried for over one hour to resuscitate her in the bathroom but could not bring
her around. The camp authorities had to send her to the hospital for emergency
treatment. She was diagnosed with a massive cerebral hemorrhage. After her skull
was opened, the doctors found three out of the four cerebral ventricles suffered
massive hemorrhages. After the incident occurred, in order to deceive Ms. Li's
family and keep the facts from them, the police tried to avoid responsibility by
inciting criminal prisoners and those "collaborators", former practitioners who
had turned against Dafa under pressure to create false evidence.
The perpetrators also forced Falun Gong practitioners who had scabies and
whose hands seeped pus to process other types of food. Some inmates and
prostitutes whose bodies seeped pus and who had STDs [sexually transmitted
diseases] were ordered to pick sunflower seeds, package chocolates and
candies, fold dessert trays and moon cake trays. They did all this work on
inmates' beds, which is a serious violation of laws regulating food hygiene
production methods. They even ordered inmates with contagious diseases to
package food-containing children's toys.
7. Since July 2001, the Longshan Labor Camp officials have forced Falun Gong
practitioners to process wax candles in various colors (other common inmates are
also forced to do this work). The wax is then exported and the labor camp makes
big profits from the cheap labor.
The Longshan Labor Camp received its first order for the wax-processing job
in mid-July 2001. The elderly and weak Falun Gong practitioners were forced to
work in their cells, making plastic packing boxes for the wax.
The majority of Falun Gong practitioners were taken to a big hall near the
entrance of the labor camp to process and to pack the wax. Over a dozen colors
were used for the wax, and each of them gave off a strong smell of artificial
perfumes that irritated their nasal passages. After a whole day's work,
practitioners would be covered with wax crumbs and their clothes would smell of
these irritating chemical odors. Many practitioners looked pale, became dizzy
and sick and lost their appetite from inhaling these toxic odors.
About 100 people were forced to do this work on a daily basis. The common
inmates can finish 80 to 90 boxes per person per day if done at a fast speed. The transparent glue used for sealing the boxes is toxic. Since practitioners
have to use their fingers to press and seal, their fingers are often stuck
together. Sometimes when this happens repeatedly it makes the skin peel off and
stick to the box.
Initially, the daily work hours were from 7:00 a.m. or 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
But later on, the guards said that more shipping containers were waiting to be
filled for delivery. So sometimes the work hours were extended until past
midnight or even around 1:00 a.m. or 2:00 a.m. Later, when they ran out of space
in the big hall, the authorities moved the wax production assembly line to the
narrow hallways between the cells. Those cells were already poorly ventilated.
Now, not only were the cells full of odors of chemical perfume but the hallways
became contaminated as well. People became dizzy and lost energy as a result.
The long work hours and the toxic smell made Falun Gong practitioners dizzy and
weak in the four limbs. For example, a practitioner named Ning in the 1st
Brigade returned from the big hall and felt dizzy and weak. He lay on his bed
and could not get up. Once, an elderly Falun Gong practitioner turned pale and
had to be helped back from the wax-processing hall.
The wax-processing work continued until early 2002. This is only one example
of manufacturers using slave labor from Chinese labor camps. They especially
take advantage of this type of labor around the peak period of overseas holidays
like Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year.
Apart from the slave labor-produced products mentioned above, the Longshan
Labor Camp also assembles and/or manufactures festive decorations such as
snowmen and snowflakes, etc. In addition, they also make shoe soles and sew
overcoats and other products. The work hours for those products are even longer
and the labor is more intense.
8. In order to make some quick money for themselves, prison guards at the
Jiamusi Forced Labor Camp in Heilongjiang Province accepted illegal production
projects, and forced camp inmates, Falun Gong practitioners included, to do the
intensive production work. They used a very inferior grade of rubber with toxic
levels exceeding the industry standards to make cell phone cases. This has
seriously harmed the health of the inmates who handled these materials. Because
of the hard slave labor and toxic materials, Falun Gong practitioners suffered
tremendously and were not able to work after a while. Practitioners who refused
to do the work were severely beaten.
Practitioners were also subjected to forced slave labor involving other
carcinogenic raw materials. Starting on March 8, 2003, all of the inmates from
the No. 9 Brigade of the Jiamusi Labor Camp, totaling more than 80 people, were
forced to make cell phone cases. The factory provided the raw materials and the
labor camp provided the manpower. The planned annual production is valued at
three million yuan, which is tax-exempt, and both parties gained tremendous
profit from this deal. In fact, the labor camp is selling business licenses.
The rubber was of poor quality and gave off an irritating gases that brought
about a harsh choking sensation. The guards on duty couldn't sustain the smell
and asked the technical supervision bureau to send their people to check it out.
The people from the technical supervision bureau came with detection
instrumentation. After lab tests they said that the toxin levels in the raw
materials used were well beyond the industry standards and could cause cancer.
Thus, the guards on duty wore large facemasks and stayed outside while guarding
the practitioners, and never entered the production area while the practitioners
were working there. At the same time, the cell phone cases made by these toxic
raw materials brought harm to consumers.
Mandatory overtime was enforced in order to meet the daily production quota.
Many practitioners and inmates suffered from constant bloody running noses,
irregular heartbeat and difficulty breathing. Dafa practitioner Ms. Shi Jing had
a pale face and collapsed on the worktable due to being overworked. Later, when
she had revived a little, she was forced to continue working.
In April 2002, the No. 7 Brigade received a production project involving
making flax cushions for car seats. Practitioners were forced to perform slave
labor from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. nonstop. This kind of flax produces a lot of
particles and dust, which is harmful to one's health, irritates the respiratory
system and causes an itchy throat and difficulty in breathing. There were no
safety measures in place in the production area. Practitioner Ms. Cao Xiuxia
became ill from the long hours of slave labor and the terrible working
conditions. Because she could not work any more, prison guard Sun Limin beat her
savagely.
In July 2002, authorities responsible for the No. 7 Brigade forced Falun Gong
practitioners to construct paper boxes for moon cakes, using toxic and
foul-smelling glue. Many practitioners became ill, with inflamed and swollen
eyes, but the prison guards didn't care.
9. The No.1 Female Forced Labor Camp in Shandong Province conspired with
several factories to force Falun Gong practitioners to make bedding products,
process plastic cement packages and put name-brand labels on quilts.
Falun Gong practitioners detained at Division Five of the labor camp suffer
the most. Their workshop was located in the basement of the labor camp
cafeteria, where sewer pipes run through. The room was low and dark, and
foul-smelling water from the pipes constantly leaked into the room. A dozen
sewing machines, both electric and manual, as well as eight 3-meter-long work
tables were in the room. The exit of the basement room was blocked to serve as
the restroom, where a urinal was placed. Since there was no wall that actually
separated the restroom from the workshop, the stench was overwhelming. When
practitioners worked in that basement room, the noise of the sewing machines and
from machines in the kitchen above created an overwhelming, traumatic
experience.
Female Falun Gong practitioners were forced to work in this basement for 12
to 15 hours every day and were deprived of daylight and fresh air, in addition
to having to endure noise of more than 200 decibels. The practitioners' health
drastically declined, as they fell ill with weak nerves, colds, headaches, upset
stomach, gastrointestinal problems and impaired hearing. The practitioners
frequently went to talk to the guards and asked for a ten-minute break at noon
or in the evening, but guards Niu Xuelian and Zhao Jie refused to allow them a
break.
The guards also extended the practitioners' work time. If the daily
production quota was not met, the guards cursed at the practitioners, deducted
the practitioners' points and extended their terms. Guard Zhao Jie claimed, "The
government cannot feed you for nothing! If you don't do a good job you'll
receive more punishment! We have more than enough ways to deal with you!"
Chinese version available at
http://minghui.org/mh/articles/2004/2/25/68517.html
3. The Story Behind Making China's "Sanitary" Chopsticks -- Exposing Slave
Labor Practices Inside Chinese Labor Camps (Part Three)
10. Methods of persecuting Falun Gong practitioners not only include cruel
torture but also forcing high intensity labor in Changchun Heizuizi Female
Forced Labor Camp in Jilin Province. Overworking practitioners is a method used
by the officials of the Forced Labor Camp to break down Falun Dafa practitioners
physically and mentally. For example: each person processing the masks is
required to finish 500 pieces per day when it is only possible to do about 300.
Each person processing handicraft products on small clothes is required
to finish from 100 to 150 pieces per day. It is impossible to finish. Any
practitioner who doesn't finish the unreasonable quota, is punished and beaten.
So, the curses and the threats happen every day.
Under extreme mental pressure and harsh physical labor Falun Gong
practitioners can't practice Falun Gong in Changchun Heizuizi Female Forced
Labor Camp, so their physical bodies have become very weak. Many of the
practitioners have heart disease, high blood pressure, cough up blood, have
pulmonary disease, or are in a coma and bleeding. Even though some practitioners
can't get up, the police still force them to go to work. As long as the
practitioners can still breathe, they have to work.
Changchun Nanguan District Sanitation Materials Factory (Mask Processing
Factory) and Changchun Yuping Crafts and Fine Arts Factory (The Clothes of Ling
Puppets Handicraft Products Processing Factory) have contracts with Changchun
Heizuizi Female Forced Labor Camp.
Changchun Heizuizi Female Forced Labor Camp also forces the practitioners to
collate book pages which is very hard to do. The first procedure for
processing a standard book is called collating large pages for a book. The shape
and size of the large pages are the same as the pages of the regular Chinese
newspapers. While folding a large page, the person has to make sure that the
page numbers match and are in the proper order. Then, gradually fold the large
page down to the standard size of a book. One large page is called one "Tai" and
there are about eight or nine "Tai" for one book. Because of the large
quantities, these large pages can be stacked as tall as a person. Folding fifty
pieces is called one "Da" (some books use one hundred pieces for one "Da") and
five "Da" are one package. People who work fast can finish between nine to
eleven packages in fifteen to eighteen hours. Beginners can only finish two or
three packages. The work is monitored for both quality and quantity. If a person
folds the large page just a little bit off center, it will be very easy to cut
off the words or the page numbers when doing the third procedure which is when
they cut the pages down to size. Falun Dafa practitioners are all beaten and
cursed by the police and the criminals during the folding procedure.
The folding board for the big pages is made of bamboo. It is about 38cm long
and 6cm wide. It is also used as an implement of punishment. Liu Lianying, the
head of the Second Brigade, beats Falun Dafa practitioners with the bamboo
folding board, especially on their faces and mouths. From 1999 until 2001, Falun
Dafa practitioners Zheng Donghui, Zheng Sixiang, Xu Gongchun, Tian Xiuhua and
others all suffered from this torture so much that their faces and eyes were
swollen and there were big knots on their foreheads.
An article revealing the crimes committed against practitioners in this place
was written by a Jilin Falun Gong practitioner and published on the Minghui.net.
In the article, she pointed out that the purpose of forced labor for Falun Dafa
practitioners in the Changchun Heizuizi Female Forced Labor Camp is to try to
destroy the practitioners' will. She wrote: "On March 8, 2003, the officials of
the Changchun Heizuizi Female Forced Labor Camp continuously forced Dafa
practitioners to sort soybeans and only allowed them to sleep less than
two hours a day for three days, using the excuse the work being a rush job.
While sorting out the soybeans, the practitioners were so tired that our eyes
were dim-sighted. Regardless, we had to carry the bags of sorted soybeans from
upstairs to downstairs. Each bag weighed about forty five kilograms and we did
over twenty tons. Next, we had to carry up the bags of unsorted soybeans from
downstairs to upstairs. Each of these bags weighed about sixty-five kilograms.
In all, we moved over seventy tons. At that time, no one knew how many old,
young and sick people were involved processing this rush job. I continuously
carried bags sixteen times round trip in two hours and another practitioner who
worked with me did seventeen round trips in the same time. During this 'rush
job,' some practitioners hurt their backs and some even threw up due to complete
exhaustion."
A Jilin girl who was just twenty-two years old in 2004, said: "On January 8,
2003, I was transferred to the Changchun Heizuizi Female Forced Labor Camp,
where they assigned me to the 'performing team.' After that, I was separated
from others. I was not allowed to go out of the ward nor was I allowed to talk
with anyone during times allotted for bathing or going to the bathroom. I was
not even allowed to have a meal downstairs. In the daytime, I wasn't allowed to
close my eyes, to sit with my legs crossed or to stand in front of the windows.
We couldn't even look each other. That was not all, I was forced to attend
brainwashing sessions, read propaganda and watch television programs all
defaming Falun Dafa. This was the first time in my twenty years of living that I
felt how terrible it was to lose my freedom."
"Because I persisted in practicing Falun Dafa, policewoman Xiao Aiqiu talked
to me several times. When she saw that didn't work, she decided to not allow my
mother to visit me and threatened me several times that if I didn't give up
Falun Gong I would have to stay there longer and would be locked in solitary
confinement. I got sores that festered very fast. She didn't dare to touch me,
so she only kicked me several times. Under the tremendous mental pressure and
fear every day, I could hardly sleep. Sometimes I woke up from nightmares even
though I had just fallen asleep. I felt much older than twenty during that
period of time. Later, I became scared, very emotional and nervous, and I didn't
want to talk with anyone. I couldn't take it any more and almost went crazy.
Previously I had been such an active and bright girl."
The girl said that after she wrote the "Renouncement Statement" (the written
proclamation giving up practicing Falun Gong), which was contrary to her inner
belief, she was released from the solitary ward, where she had been confined for
thirty-five days. Then she was sent to work in the workshop and to practice
dancing.
She also said: "Our regular work and rest schedule was that we got up between
4:30 and 5: 00 AM. After washing our faces and brushing our teeth, we
immediately went to work and went to sleep at 8:30 PM. Sometimes we were forced
to work overtime until 9:00 or 10:00 PM. The latest time was past midnight and
we had to get up at 4:00 AM in order to finish the rush work. Our only rest time
was when we had a meal or when we went to the bathroom. It was even scheduled
what time we could go to the bathroom. They only allowed us to have twenty
minutes to finish the whole process from lining up in order and counting
people's numbers, getting down to the canteen and having a meal, washing the
dishes, and counting the numbers before going back upstairs, so we had to eat
quickly. After a long period of time, many people developed stomach problems by
doing it this way.
The girl who continuously refused to give her name: "In Changchun Heizuizi
Female Forced Labor Camp, the First Brigade was required to make butterflies
and birds. The Second Brigade was making birds and collating book pages. The
Third Brigade was making the birds and collating book pages. The Fourth Brigade
was collating book pages and processing the small toy clothing craft products.
The Fifth Brigade was making various birds. Some of the birds were made
of feathers while others were made of paper. The Sixth Brigade was making the
birds and processing the small toy clothing craft products. The Seventh
Brigade was making birds, small toy ship craft products and sewing products.
In addition to that, they also processed some other products such as
advertisement banners, paper bags, paper boxes and other things. The bird and
butterfly craft products and small toy clothes were exported to Japan, America
and other countries. Every year the brigades regularly turn over a lot of money
to the Changchun Heizuizi Female Forced Labor Camp, the rest of the money all
becomes the warden's bonus, so the production quantity directly relates with the
warden's benefits."
"The performing teams don't have a fixed output in the Changchun Heizuizi
Female's Forced Labor Camp, but they do have this in the fifth brigade. We were
not only doing the work but also rehearsing dances. There were no words to
describe how tired we were. Whenever we hurried up to finish an order of
product, we had to continuously work overtime. It seemed that we would just get
to sleep, and it was already time to get up. People were so tired that they
could go to sleep standing up. Every time when a holiday was coming such as May
first, July first or October first, we were required to rehearse dance
performances over and over from the morning until the evening. After dancing the
whole time, we couldn't feel where our feet were. The exhaustion and the extreme
mental pressure made me rapidly age. Now, I already have some wrinkles on my
face and I look a several years older than I did a year ago. Once policewoman
Xiao Aiqiu told me to bring a dancing tape to the workshop and put it on the
table, which I did. However, there was a box of glue on the table too. When she
saw that the tape was next to the box of glue, she yelled: 'If the tape gets
dirty, I will kill you.' Another time while going downstairs to rehearse the
dance, Xiao Aiqiu told me to hold her drinking glass and said to me: 'If you
drop my glass, I will kill you.' One time before the formal performance, a dance
wasn't prepared enough, and she said to me: 'If your performance tomorrow isn't
good, I will shock you to death with an electric baton.' It was as if a tape, a
glass, or a performance was more valuable than my life. One time I saw the
policewoman Wang Limei shock an over fifty-year-old practitioner because she
insisted on practicing Falun Dafa. When I heard the sound of her being
electrically shocked, I felt as if the electric baton was shocking my own body.
I can never forget that scene."
Another Falun Gong practitioner who wrote to the Minghui.net said: "I was
abducted by the police from my home on March 16, 2003, and was sentenced to a
year and half of forced labor in the Changchun Heizuizi Female Forced Labor
Camp. Their excuse was that I was found to have a Falun Dafa book. Most of the
people who were held at the facility were Falun Dafa practitioners and the rest
were criminals. Every day, we were processing handicraft products such as birds,
butterflies, and small toy clothes in the workshops of the third brigade. It was
said that those were exported overseas. There were over thirty people in our
workshop."
"One day in May or June 2003, we were working in the workshop. About 2:00 PM,
the labor camp police suddenly shouted at us to close all the windows and not
look outside. So all the windows were closed but they forgot to close our
workshop's windows. What happened? What were they doing? Some Falun Gong
practitioners and I looked outside through the open windows. We saw four medical
workers with masks and isolation clothes carrying a person on a stretcher. They
had come from the ward opposite the second brigade. The person on the stretcher
wore the camp's clothes. Her head was covered and she didn't move at all. While
stepping down, the wind blew the cover off of her head and we saw her face. It
seemed that she was dead. They carried her out of the camp gate and took her
away in a vehicle. Meanwhile the automatic door was closed and we couldn't see
any more."
"Later on, we asked around privately and found that the person who was
carried out of the camp was a Falun Dafa practitioner and she was indeed dead.
We didn't know her name and we didn't know how she had been tortured to death.
This is because the practitioners were not permitted to talk to each other in
the Forced Lobar Camp. Hopefully, some practitioners who were released from the
second brigade of Changchun Heizuizi Female Forced Labor Camp can expose the
facts of her murder to the public.
Chinese version available at
http://minghui.org/mh/articles/2004/2/25/68518.html
4. The Story Behind Making China's "Sanitary" Chopsticks -- Exposing Slave
Labor Practices Inside Chinese Labor Camps (Part Four)
11. According to Falun Gong practitioners who were once incarcerated in
Yitong Detention Center in Yitong Manchu Autonomous County, Jilin Province, the
staff at Yitong Detention Center forced them to work as slaves without any pay,
labor rights, or even human rights, to make a type of handicraft for export
referred to as the "Handcrafted Artificial Bird." Everyday they worked extremely
long hours and took a severe toll on their health. The incarcerated Falun Gong
practitioners were held as slaves to provide free labor beyond their physical
limit, and they were also subjected to the disciplinary staff and slave labor
supervisors' brutal beatings. Wang Qi from Yitong Manchu Autonomous County's
"610 Office" did not deny it when Minghui reporter Chu Tianxing contacted him to
confirm the alleged slave labor in the forced labor camps in Yitong County. [The
610 Office is an agency specifically created to persecute Falun Gong, with
absolute power over each level of administration in the Party and all other
political or judicial systems.]
The "Handcrafted Artificial Bird" is a type of export product. Each bird is
made of molded polystyrene in the shape of a bird wrapped with Ricepaperplant
Pith (or Medulla Tetrapanacis) glued with bark for the wings and feathers
for its tail. The prison inmates at Yitong Detention Center worked as slave
labor supervisors at different levels. Falun Gong practitioners illegally
detained in Yitong Detention Center did not get any days off given to all
detainees. Moreover, they were often forced to work into the night until one to
two A.M. In order to increase the production output, the disciplinary staff
would even deny Falun Gong practitioners sleep for three to four days. All the
revenue from slave labor went into the pockets of the disciplinary and other
staff members at Yitong Detention Center.
Besides being held as slaves to work long hours exceeding a normal human
limit, Falun Gong practitioners were subjected to the disciplinary staff and
inmates-turned-supervisors' brutal and willful beatings on a daily basis. Inside
sources revealed that at any time the disciplinary staff and
inmates-turned-supervisors would use hand tools that were supposed to be used to
make "handcrafted artificial birds" to torture Falun Gong practitioners. For
instance, they would batter Falun Gong practitioners' shoulder blades with
rubber-sheathed hammers, causing them excruciating pain. They would also flog
Falun Gong practitioners' heads with rattan canes.
The disciplinary staff and the slave labor supervisors also made a new type
of torture tool called "Giant Wood Planks." Someone at Yitong Detention Center
made a ragged verse of black humor to describe the horrible impact of such a
torture device: "One lick turns one pale (lack of blood); two licks turns one
red (blood); three licks tears flesh." It was fairly common that the
disciplinary staff and inmates-turned supervisors tore Falun Gong practitioners'
flesh with the appalling flogging with the "Giant Wood Planks" every day. A
practitioner with the last name of Bao was once subject to repeated floggings
with "Giant Wood Planks" on the hips. The injury was so severe that the
practitioner was unable to recover even a month after the flogging.
A government official on the Economics Committee in Yitong Manchu Autonomous
County once revealed that several units under the Economics Committee were
indeed responsible for the production contract of "Handcrafted Artificial
Birds." It is "normal" for the detention centers and forced labor camps to bid
contracts at an extremely low price from the local manufacturing plants and then
force detainees to provide slave labor to complete the contracts. Commercial
production using incarcerated Falun Gong practitioners as slaves is the very
reason why the detention centers and forced labor camps can afford to bid so low
on commercial contracts and still make a profit.
12. Xin'an Forced Labor Camp in Beijing and Mickey Toy Co. Ltd. in Beijing
once cooperated to profit from a toy bunny contract, where they enslaved
incarcerated Falun Gong practitioners to make toy bunnies for the Nestle
Company.
Picture 1: Photo of Beijing Mickey Toys Co., Ltd sign board on
its front gate.
Picture 2: Toy rabbits produced by Mickey Co., LTD for Nestle 13. The No. 1 Female Forced Labor Camp in Shandong Province became the
production plant [using slave labor] for the Lider General Corporation Ltd. in
Shandong Province and Tianyi Printing Company Ltd. in Jinan, Shandong Province.
Incarcerated Falun Gong practitioners were forced to process and sew quilts for
Lider General Corporation Ltd. and to put name-brand labels on the quilts such
as "Beijing Jiangyaling" and "Shuanghe" for Tianyi Printing Company Ltd. The
quilts are exported to more than ten countries, including the United States,
Canada, Chili, the EU, Japan, South Korea, Singapore and other countries.
III. Slave Labor Violates Chinese Laws and the United Nations' Universal
Declaration of Human Rights
Slave labor in China violates the Chinese Constitution, as well as the
following Chinese Laws:
It is in the very Chinese Constitution that forbids slave labor. Because of
the limit in article length, we are listing only Article 42 and 43 from the
Chinese Constitution
Article 42. Citizens of the People's Republic of China have the right as
well as the duty to work. Using various channels, the state creates conditions
for employment, strengthens labour protection, improves working conditions and,
on the basis of expanded production, increases remuneration for work and social
benefits. Work is the glorious duty of every able-bodied citizen. All working
people in state enterprises and in urban and rural economic collectives should
perform their tasks with an attitude consonant with their status as masters of
the country. The state promotes socialist labour emulation, and commends and
rewards model and advanced workers. The state encourages citizens to take part
in voluntary labour. The state provides necessary vocational training to
citizens before they are employed.
Article 43. Working people in the People's Republic of China have the
right to rest. The state expands facilities for rest and recuperation of working
people, and prescribes working hours and vacations for workers and staff.
According to [human rights] observers, the enslaved labor in the forced labor
camps, detention centers, and prisons in China violates Chinese Laws, as well as
the United Nation's Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Article 4 of the
Universal Declaration of Human
Rights states, "No one shall be held in slavery or servitude; slavery and
the slave trade shall be prohibited in all their forms."
In May 2002, the Congressional-Executive Commission On China made several
recommendations to the United States Congress regarding the United States'
responsibilities for monitoring and improving China's human rights. One of the
recommendations calls for enforcing the prohibition of the importation of goods
made by prisoners into the United States.
According to a Taiwan Central New Agency report on May 11, 2002,
although Section 307 of the Tariff Act of 1930 (10 U.S.C. ? 1307) prohibits the
importing of goods made by prisoners into the United States, U.S. officials has
not appropriately or effectively executed this law or denied import of prison
labor products to the United States.
According to the Congressional-Executive Commission On China's
2002 Annual
Report, "The United States and China signed a Memorandum of Understanding in
1992 to prevent import into the United States of products made using Chinese
prison labor. A subsequent agreement in 1994 permitted U.S. officials, with
Chinese government permission, to visit prison facilities suspected of producing
goods for export to the United States." [1] U.S. officials have made 13 requests
for site visits since 1996, but they have been permitted to conduct only 3 site
visits in China.
The Congressional-Executive Commission On China recommended, "The US
government encourages companies to adopt and follow a progressive code of
conduct. The Secretary of Commerce, OPIC, and the Export Import Bank should be
directed to give preference to companies that have a strong code of conduct and
prove they have been following it in their business practices." [1]
According to the Congressional-Executive Commission On China's
2002 Annual
Report, "The United States-China Relations Act of 2000 created a Prison
Labor Task Force to monitor and promote effective enforcement of U.S. law in
this area. Its first annual report to Congress stated, ''We believe that prison
officials frequently provide prison labor to private, quasi-government, or
government-owned manufacturing facilities to perform manufacturing and assembly
work, and that the remuneration prisons receive for prisoners' services give
prison officials no incentive to cooperate in preventing the export to the
United States of goods made with prison labor.'' Overall, Chinese cooperation in
implementing these understandings has been minimal." [1]
Founded in January 2003 "to investigate the criminal conduct of all
institutions, organizations, and individuals involved in the persecution of
Falun Gong" [2], the World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun
Gong (WOIPFG) pointed out in an investigation report, "The forced labor system
not only violates the basic human rights of the detainees, but also encourages
the prison and labor camp systems to persecute the detainees because of the huge
profit in products made by forced labor. In addition, it shakes the stability of
international labor and trade market when these cheap products are dumped on the
international market." [3]
More and more Chinese people will continue to overcome China's information
barrier and reveal the facts about enslaved labor in China's forced labor camps. References:
[1] "Labor Rights and Working Conditions" in Chapter 2: Commission Activities
in 2002: Issues and Recommendations of
Congressional-Executive Commission on China Annual Report for 2002
[2] WOIPFG's
Mission
Statement
[3] "WOIPFG
Report on Products Practitioners Are Forced to Manufacture in China's Labor
Camps (Photos)" Chinese version available at
http://www.minghui.org/mh/articles/2004/2/25/68519.html
Chinese version of the collection available at:
http://www.minghui.org/mh/articles/2004/8/11/81465.html
Chinese version available at
http://www.minghui.org/mh/articles/2004/8/11/81465.html
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