China News  
SINO DAILY
Migrant worker evictions tear at Beijing's backbone
By Ryan MCMORROW, Joanna CHIU
Beijing (AFP) Jan 4, 2018


Old Shanghai neighbourhood shivers in winter
Shanghai (AFP) Jan 4, 2018 - Amidst the skyscrapers of a modern Chinese metropolis, the city's oldest neighbourhood shivers through the winter thanks to an old rule forbidding central heating.

In Laoximen, not far from Shanghai's swanky riverfront Bund, locals and migrant workers bundle up in thick coats inside houses built decades ago.

To save energy, the Chinese government decided in the 1950s that areas of the country south of the Qinling mountains and Huaihe river in north-central China would not have state-provided central heating.

Shanghai lies in the designated southern zone even though average temperatures in winter are around four degrees at night and 12 degrees during the day.

And in the city's lower-income neighbourhoods such as Laoximen, people are too poor to pay for electric heaters.

Many of them own air conditioners that can double as heating devices, but they are left largely unused in the winters because residents cannot afford the resulting electricity bills, which can top 100 yuan per month ($15) or much more.

The area used to be the city's cultural centre. Surrounding a Confucian temple, the mostly two- and three-storey wooden buildings remain at the heart of Shanghai's commercial district even today.

It is in this neighbourhood that migrant workers can rent homes for just 1,000 yuan ($150) a month.

For Zhang Dongjun, a 57-year-old street sweeper, a heater was too much of a luxury to pack into his tiny single room: a bunk bed takes up most of the space. He uses an electric blanket to keep himself warm at night.

A woman in her 70s who gave only her surname, Yin, complained about the lack of a more affordable heating system.

The cold weather makes her legs ache, Yin said, adding she spends most of her retirement money on healthcare costs.

"Heaters use electricity and we never turn them on unless we have friends or family visiting us," she said.

"Most of the time, we just use a hot-water pouch to keep our hands warm."

Bao Shanchun, who collects antiques from the many old houses being demolished around Shanghai, shares a heater with another man in a space less than 10 square meters. But it is not turned on even at night.

"I'm very happy here to earn one or two hundred yuan a day. To make money every day makes me happy," said Bao, who came to Shanghai 15 years ago from nearby Jiangsu province because he thought "gold is everywhere" in the city.

"I will go back to my hometown when I'm 70," said Bao, now 64.

"I have big houses there."

They fuelled their nation's dramatic economic rise, toiling in jobs far from home, but China's migrant workers are now finding themselves increasingly unwelcome as authorities try to cap the population explosions in key cities.

Lin Huiqing moved to Beijing to look for work when his children were still in diapers.

For the last eighteen years, he has seen his family just once a year, the rest spent doing the hard labour most Beijingers would prefer to avoid.

The 50-year-old is one of hundreds of millions of migrants who moved from the countryside to the cities, a colossal demographic shift that made China's ascent possible.

But last month Lin was evicted from the village where he lived on the capital's outskirts, another victim of a city-wide demolition plan to limit Beijing's population to 23 million by 2020 -- a target that could come at the cost of its economy.

"If I go home, I have no way to support my wife and kids," Lin lamented.

According to the Communist Party mouthpiece People's Daily, the city plans to demolish 40 million square metres of "illegal" structures.

Many are the homes and shops of low-income migrants like Lin.

When he first arrived in Beijing, Lin and his friends pooled their money and took out loans to purchase delivery trucks.

He made a living hauling the wares of small-scale shopkeepers and traders, but the moving business has taken a hit as the city condemns buildings en masse, evicting tens of thousands into the winter cold.

"Our customers are commoners like us," he said. "With their small businesses shut down, there's no stock for us to move. We're basically unemployed now."

- 'Can't make it here anymore' -

Authorities say the campaign, which kicked into high gear after a fire in an illegal structure killed 19 in November, is needed to clean the city up once and for all.

But it is also removing vibrant chunks of Beijing's economy, such as retail and small scale manufacturing, and throwing into chaos other sectors like delivery, the bedrock of the booming e-commerce trade.

Relegated to the periphery, migrants have kept China's economy humming, handling the difficult, dirty and sometimes dangerous work that the city's permanent residents won't do.

Urban industries like construction, domestic work and sanitation are almost completely staffed by migrants.

Eli Friedman, associate professor of international and comparative labor at Cornell University, said China's biggest cities "simply cannot function without migrant workers".

"If every non-local were to actually be removed from cities like Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou, these economic engines for the whole country would completely collapse," he told AFP.

But that is exactly what is happening, said Li Ning, one of the 60,000 delivery drivers who criss-cross Beijing's streets.

Li was recently evicted from a village on the city's outskirts, forcing him into an apartment where the rent quadrupled.

Then authorities came for his delivery company's warehouse, forcing staff to sort packages on the sidewalk and sending his income plummeting.

"In Beijing all the migrants are leaving. We can't make it here anymore," he said, adding he plans to leave for good during the upcoming spring festival.

Another delivery franchise owner surnamed Wang said she will "give up" if authorities knock down her current warehouse, which they marked in black paint with the character "chai" -- (demolish) -- in mid-December.

She had just moved in December 1, after she had to close two other delivery hubs this year, forcing her to cut her work force from 240 couriers to 60.

"There's no stability. I don't know what I'll be facing tomorrow," she said, tears welling in her eyes.

- 'Now we have to start over' -

The demolitions have also hit Beijing's retail sector, decimating once affordable mom and pop shops and pushing consumers online or into high-end malls.

Two years ago, Ge Guoxiang moved with his wife from their home province of Jiangsu to take over his brother's textiles stall.

It had thrived for over 20 years in Beijing's Tuanjiehu Tianyu market. But three months ago, they received notice that authorities will shutter the market.

Dozens of small-scale community markets have been forced to shut down this year -- including the iconic Beijing Zoo market, where hundreds of merchants organized rare street protests against the evictions.

Officials said they have designated certain areas in the neighbouring Hebei province where merchants can move their businesses to.

But Ge is unconvinced.

"It takes years for businesses like ours to build up clientele. Now we have to start over," he said.

"Our clients are mostly older people who don't know how to shop online. Where will they go?"

SINO DAILY
Tech icon ordered back to China sends wife instead
Beijing (AFP) Jan 2, 2018
A major Chinese tech entrepreneur has defied regulators' orders to return home, writing Tuesday that his wife and brother would deal with the debt woes plaguing his LeEco conglomerate. Jia Yueting, the 44-year-old head of a tech empire that has spanned electric cars and smartphones, posted a letter on social media to the Beijing branch of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, which las ... read more

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