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Kidnapped and sent to the mines - the Wei Wenlin affairPosted by Joel Martinsen, August 14, 2007 3:11 PM
![]() Wei Wenlin, home from a Shanxi coal mine.
Interestingly, The Beijing News reports that in Shanxi Province alone, there were 36,286 unlicensed work units, making up 42% of the total inspectedm, and 65.5% of 4860 brick kilns in the province were unlicensed, with 17 engaged in serious criminal activity (more details at ESWN). There's no information in any of the reports about how many of the freed workers actually found their way home. In more troubling news, it appears as if there are some gaping holes in the inspection process. The Changjiang Times reported yesterday on the case of Wei Wenlin, a seventeen-year-old boy from Hanchuan, Hubei, who disappeared earlier this month from Shijiazhuang, Hebei, where he had been working in a garment factory. On 6 August, in a Shijiazhuang newspaper, Wei's father saw a description of a drowning victim that matched his son very closely. He claimed the body, had it cremated, and then held a funeral on 10 August. That afternoon Wei Wenlin returned, saying he had been kidnapped and taken to a mine in Shanxi. Here's an interview with a reporter:
Later, Wei told of how he was kidnapped from a Shijiazhuang street: (excerpted) At 2 in the morning on 1 August, after Wei Wenlin had finished his evening shift at the garment factory in Shijiazhuang where he worked, he went outside by himself, wearing slippers, to buy some toothpaste. When he was leaving the store to come back, an unmarked van suddenly stopped in front of him and two big men gut out. They said they were from the PSB and needed to check his ID card. Then they forcibly pushed him into the van. The car also held a driver and a man who spoke with a Shanxi accent. After getting him into the car, they blindfolded and gagged him. After a while, Wei felt himself being pushed out of the van and put into another large vehicle. "They beat my back and head with sticks." After a short silence, two men with Shanxi accents motioned for Wei and a few others to go with them. Although they weren't blindfolded, they were not permitted to raise their heads or look to either side. After more than ten minutes, the group reached a cave that had been dug out no long before. Two men gve them shovels and hammers and had them go into the coal pit to work. As Wei Wenlin remembers, there were four other young men who had been taken with him. The five of them were forced to open up a coal pit 30 meters deep and 70 meters long; their specific task was to dig holes for dynamite. They began work as soon as they arrived, around 2 August, and every day they were given four mantou. Before going into the pit, the mine gave each person a pair of tall boots and a pair of gloves. There were no safety helmets. Wei, who had never worked underground, did not want to go down. A man kicked him in his back, and Wei said he collapsed to the ground and could not get up for the pain. According to Wei's account, they worked about 10 hours a day underground. They ate and relieved themselves in the pit. Once, while in the pit, he said "I don't want to work," and a man punched him. This reporter saw a laceration at the corner of his right eye that had not yet healed. "The second day at work it stormed, and the mine lost power. The five of us planned to escape." Wei recalls that on that evening, a storm cut the mine's electricity and the entire area was an inky blackness. "There was nowhere left to go the whole time there, so why not just make a run for it." The five youths took advantage of the darkness to climb up on the roof, and once they escaped the guards, they ran for it. After a long time running, the rain finally stopped. They saw a mountain covered in apple trees, and they ate a few apples they picked. However, they did not dare to go into towns or villages where there were a lot of people, nor did they dare to walk on roads where there were people and cars. When night came, they slept in a valley, and started off again when it was light. Those few days, far from people and without any idea of what day it was or where they were, their only thought was to return home to be with their parents. When they had rested a bit, the sun came up. After crossing countless hills and streams, they saw a village, but because they were afraid that the mining people would be there, they didn't go near it. They followed a railway close by the village. After more walking, they arrived at Yangquan, Shanxi. The five escapees parted ways at this point. After he entered the city, Wei Wenlin went to the Yangquan PSB to make a report. Then he was transferred to the Yangquan aid station. "When I went to report to the Yangquan PSB, the local police sent me to the aid station." At the aid station, Wei received assistance. "A Mr. Li at the aid station bought me lunch and then arranged for me to bathe. He asked me the specifics of my situation and then had me register. After I had showered and changed clothes, I rested for one night, and then the aid station bought me a train ticket back home. On 7 August, when he gave me the train ticket, Mr. Li called the Wuhan aid station and asked them to send someone to the Hankou train station to get me." Yesterday, the reporter called the Yangquan aid station. A worker there told the reporter that he had heard of this matter and the man who had offered help was named Li Xueyou. He was at home because it was the weekend. At 8am on the 9th, when Wei Wenlin arrived at the Hankou train station, someone from the Wuhan aid station came to get him. He was questioned and registered, and then stayed over a night. The following afternoon, he was given ten yuan and sent from Hankou to Hanchuan. Yesterday, a worker at the Wuhan aid station confirmed this situation. According to Wei's account, when he arrived in Hanchuan, he had no money, so he walked twenty kilometers home. Because he was too tired, he laid down in a wood not 100 meters from his house. Four hours later, he finally arrived home. And in The Beijing News today (and a number of other papers, including the Changjiang Times), Shu Shengxiang commented on what Wei's case means for the media and the local government:
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There are currently 3 Comments for Kidnapped and sent to the mines - the Wei Wenlin affair.
Comments on Kidnapped and sent to the mines - the Wei Wenlin affairYour earlier article, "In search of the missing kiln workers", has been referred to on Austin Ramzy's China Blog, "A Dream of Freedom" (14 Aug) Sun Baoshu will be waiting an awfully long time for "an effective long-term system that will cure the symptoms and causes and will prevent this type of situation from happening again." The end of one-party rule, and the establishment of independent, democratic institutions of government seem a long way off. Issues like the kiln affair illustrate not only why these things are necessary, but why they're so frightening for current officials. Besides losing power and influence, which certainly isn't a given, independent accountability would mean that they themselves would be implicated in crimes like the kiln affair. Honestly, how high up in the government can you rise without finding yourself complicit in something? Wow thats sad! |
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