Capital: Beijing

See Guide to the ITUC international trade union rights framework and the right to strike strike The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike , many workers undertake industrial action industrial action Any form of action taken by a group of workers, a union or an employer during an industrial dispute to gain concessions from the other party, e.g. a strike, go-slow or an overtime ban, or a lockout on the part of the employer. to claim unpaid wages, end corruption, demand better working conditions and wages and increasingly to call for genuine company unions.
100 Equal Remuneration for Work of Equal Value (1951) 138 Minimum Age for Employment (1973) 182 Worst Forms of Child Labour Convention (1999)
reported violations - 2011
Background
100 Equal Remuneration for Work of Equal Value (1951) 138 Minimum Age for Employment (1973) 182 Worst Forms of Child Labour Convention (1999)
Capital: Beijing

reported violations- 2011
Trade union rights in law
Chinese labour laws fall short of international standards. There is no real freedom of association
freedom of association
The right to form and join the trade union of one’s choosing as well as the right of unions to operate freely and carry out their activities without undue interference.
See Guide to the ITUC international trade union rights framework
, as only one “workers” organisation is recognised in law, the All China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU). The establishment of any trade union shall be submitted to the union organisation at the next higher level for approval, and the latter shall “exercise leadership” over those at the lower level. The law also empowers the ACFTU to exercise financial control over all its constituents. Furthermore, the legal procedures for registering a union office in an enterprise can be completed without trade union officials even entering the workplace, and branches can be set up in some enterprises simply by carrying out administrative procedures.
There are no comprehensive national level regulations on collective bargaining
collective bargaining
The process of negotiating mutually acceptable terms and conditions of employment as well as regulating industrial relations between one or more workers’ representatives, trade unions, or trade union centres on the one hand and an employer, a group of employers or one or more employers’ organisations on the other.
See collective bargaining agreement
procedures, but only on collective contracts. However, a collective contract established in line with the regulations is legally binding. There have also been considerable efforts to set up a dispute resolution system in the last decade. The right to strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
was removed from the Constitution in 1982, and the revised Trade Union Law does not use the term “strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
” (bagong) but instead refers to instances of “work stoppages” (tinggong) and “go-slows” (daigong).
Freedom of association / Right to organize
Principles
Freedom of association :
- >The right to freedom of association is recognized by law but strictly regulated.
China's Trade Union Law was adopted in 1950, amended in 1992 and again in October 2001. Workers are not free to form or join the trade unions of their choice. Only one "workers' organisation" is recognised in law, the All China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU). In February 2001, the Chinese Government ratified the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), but announced at the same time that provisions guaranteed under Article 8,1 (a) of the Covenant, namely the right to establish and join workers' organisations of one's own choosing, would be dealt with in accordance with Chinese law. In doing so, the government effectively entered a reservation concerning a fundamental element of the Covenant, thereby putting itself in breach of internationally recognised principles on the law of treaties. It did not, however, enter any such reservation concerning Article 8, 1 (d) of the Covenant, which guarantees the right to strike. In April and May 2005, the United Nations Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, which monitors State parties' compliance with the ICESCR, examined the first report submitted to it by China following its ratification of the Covenant. In its "Concluding Observations", the Committee "regretted" China's "prohibition of the right to organise and join independent trade unions". It also "urged" China "to amend the Trade Union Act to allow workers to form independent trade unions outside the structure of the All China Federation of Trade Unions".
Anti-Union discrimination:
- >NO INFORMATION AVAILABLE
Restrictions
Restrictions on workers' right to form and join organizations of their own choosing:
- >Single trade union system imposed by law and/or a system banning or limiting organising at a certain level (enterprise, industry and/or sector, regional and/or territorial, national)
- Only one "workers' organisation" is recognised in law, the All China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU). According to the Trade Union Law, the establishment of any trade union organisation, whether local, national or industrial, "shall be submitted to the trade union organisation at the next higher level for approval". Trade union organisations at a higher level "shall exercise leadership" over those at lower level. The 2008 Labour Contract Law (LCL) along with several regional directives further facilitate the control of higher level All China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU) branches and officials over grassroots unions and worker representatives not yet in a union.
- >Restrictions on workers' right to join the trade union of their choosing imposed by law (i.e. obligation to join a trade union of a certain level e.g. enterprise, industry and/or sector, regional and /or territorial national)
- Workers are not free to form or join the trade unions of their choice. Only one "workers' organisation" is recognised in law, the All China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU).
Restrictions on trade unions' right to organize their administration:
- >Restrictions on the right to freely organise activities and formulate programmes
- The law empowers the All China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU) to exercise financial control over all its constituents.
Right to collective bargaining
Principles
Right to collective bargaining:
- >The right to collective bargaining is not specifically protected in law, but neither is it explicitly prohibited.
There is currently no national law specifically governing collective bargaining procedures but only regulations on collective contracts. However, a collective contract established in line with the regulations is legally binding. The 1992 Trade Union Law first authorised unions at the enterprise level to conclude collective contracts and the Labour Law (effective 1995) developed the system by adopting collective consultation as a key mechanism for settling disputes between employers and workers. Article 33 of the Labour Law states that workers have the right to conclude a collective contract "in an enterprise where the trade union has not yet been set up". The amended Trade Union Law of 2001 again strengthened the union's mandate in collective wage negotiations as do regulations issued in 2000 and 2001. Provincial regulations issued in 2008 may however help develop more detailed contracts and a more genuine form of negotiation process. Several cities and provinces issued regulations which deal either with the implementation of existing labour legislation or give more details on collective contract procedures and contents.
Right to strike
Principles
The right to strike was removed from China's Constitution in 1982, on the grounds that the political system in place had "eradicated problems between the proletariat and enterprise owners". Despite expectations that the revised Trade Union Law would include the right to strike, it skirts around the issue. Article 27 does not employ the term "strike" (bagong), but instead refers to instances of "work stoppages" (tinggong) and "go-slows" (daigong). In 2008, there were some official comments on the need for clarity on the issue.
100 Equal Remuneration for Work of Equal Value (1951) 138 Minimum Age for Employment (1973) 182 Worst Forms of Child Labour Convention (1999)
Capital: Beijing

reported violations - 2011
In practice
Forced labour is prohibited but occurs in commercial enterprises and labour camps. China imposes forced prison labour as a form of “re-education through labour”, which is an administrative punishment often used for petty criminals, dissidents and labour activists. A similar forced labour system for “rehabilitation” is in force for drug addicts. Trafficking in human beings is also prohibited by law but remains a serious problem. There has not been much progress in prosecuting traffickers and in protecting and assisting victims of trafficking.
Reports of forced labour continued to emerge in 2010. For example, in May 2010 police rescued 34 people forced to work at a brick kiln in Hebei province, and in December media reported the discovery of 11 disabled workers at a building materials plant, Jiaersi Green Construction Material Chemical Factory in the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous region. The workers had allegedly been beaten regularly and ate the same food as the factory dogs. None of those employed at the factory had ever been paid even though some had been working for four years. Workers attempting to escape had also been beaten. The company owner stated that he had paid an agency a lump sum of 9000 Yuan (USD 1,350) for the delivery of five of the workers and then an additional 300 Yuan per worker per month.
In 2007 a major investigation, instigated by the parents of missing children, found at least several hundred abducted minors and disabled workers forced to work for little or no pay. Estimates state that some 53,000 migrant workers had been employed in more than 2000 illegal brick kilns in Shanxi alone.
The All China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU) is the sole trade union body allowed to exist. Its role and the supervision of higher level branches over lower level branches was strengthened in the 2008 legislation, especially in resolving labour issues and helping promote the nationwide development of a “harmonious society” and a “harmonious workplace”. It works primarily on wage arrear campaigns, membership drives, pushing for wage increases, philanthropic work and encouraging collective consultation with employers and within industrial sectors.
The ACFTU played a significant role in the drafting of the 2008 Labour Contract Law and in implementing regulations, and it continues to focus its efforts on organising organising The process of forming or joining a trade union, or inducing other workers to form or join one. branches in private companies and Asian multinationals.
No independent trade unions are allowed. Organisers of workers’ groups or protests are often arrested, and some are sentenced to terms of imprisonment (officially called “reform through labour”, or “lao gai”) after criminal trials that fall well short of international standards. Others can be assigned to terms of “re-education through labour”, an administrative process which bypasses the few safeguards of the criminal justice system. Strikers often are detained for a few days or weeks to avoid any risk of martyrdom for long- term detainees. The fear of detention also makes negotiations between workers’ representatives and the authorities and employers extremely difficult.
The continued use and abuse of extensive state secrets legislation including laws classifying labour-related statistics as state secrets means that labour activists can be charged with “disclosing state secrets” for their work. Despite the potential repercussions there are increasing numbers of grassroots enterprise unions either formed by the workers themselves or prompted by official organising organising The process of forming or joining a trade union, or inducing other workers to form or join one. campaigns that evolved into something resembling a trade union.
Although the Trade Union Law states that trade union officers at each level should be elected, this is often ignored, and most officials are appointed. In addition, elected candidates are subject to approval by the provincial-level All China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU) committees. “Paper unions” essentially created by management and local ACFTU officials continue to be widespread with many workers unaware of the existence of a trade union in their enterprise.
However, many provinces have developed, or are in the process of developing, regulations concerning the obligation to hold trade union elections as stipulated in the Trade Union Law. Also, in the wake of its inaction during the strikes at Honda, the union there agreed to hold elections directly for its enterprise officials as demanded by workers.
Hong Kong businesses have lobbied hard against draft laws on collective bargaining
collective bargaining
The process of negotiating mutually acceptable terms and conditions of employment as well as regulating industrial relations between one or more workers’ representatives, trade unions, or trade union centres on the one hand and an employer, a group of employers or one or more employers’ organisations on the other.
See collective bargaining agreement
in Guangdong and Shenzhen city despite increasing unrest there. Their lobbying reportedly led to major revisions in the Shenzhen legislation, including a rise in the proportion of workers needed for collective negotiation.
The number of strikes - both spontaneous and planned, but without the official recognition recognition The designation by a government agency of a union as the bargaining agent for workers in a given bargaining unit, or acceptance by an employer that its employees can be collectively represented by a union. of the union - has continued to increase, especially among private enterprise workers. Privatisation and the ensuing redundancy it engenders is a major cause of labour unrest for state-owned enterprise workers while low pay, unpaid wages and poor working conditions are among the largest causes of strikes in the private sector. Figures suggest that each day around 1,000 workers are involved in industrial action industrial action Any form of action taken by a group of workers, a union or an employer during an industrial dispute to gain concessions from the other party, e.g. a strike, go-slow or an overtime ban, or a lockout on the part of the employer. in Guangdong Province alone.
Strikes and collective protests are often dispersed violently by armed police, and prominent strikers are picked up by the police and warned or charged with public order offences, traffic violations, breaking the law on parades and demonstrations, or more rarely serious political charges. Companies regularly dismiss and blacklist workers who have led or participated in strikes. In some instances, companies also hire men to beat and threaten workers protesting missing wages or taking other forms of industrial action
industrial action
Any form of action taken by a group of workers, a union or an employer during an industrial dispute to gain concessions from the other party, e.g. a strike, go-slow or an overtime ban, or a lockout on the part of the employer.
, often with deadly results. Strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
organisers and independent labour activists also face the administration threat of re-education through labour. Though in principle limited to three years, in practice these periods of forced labour can be extended without recourse to the criminal justice system.
The increasingly commonplace nature of strikes has meant that despite the ambiguity of their legal position, some local authorities have been less hostile towards strikes, and more strikes appear to be successful. In response to the labour unrest, there have also been increases to the minimum wage figures in many regions.
See Guide to the ITUC international trade union rights framework in Chinese-owned enterprises, including major state- owned companies. This is of particular concern in the extractive industry and large construction projects in countries such as in Africa but also those in the Middle East. Chinese workers who complain of poor conditions have faced repercussions on their return to China.
100 Equal Remuneration for Work of Equal Value (1951) 138 Minimum Age for Employment (1973) 182 Worst Forms of Child Labour Convention (1999)
Capital: Beijing

reported violations - 2011
Violations
On 15 January around 10,000 workers at a factory owned by United Win (China) Technology, in Jiangsu, a subsidiary of the Taiwanese company Wintek Group, went on strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
in protest against a pay cut and poor work-safety environment. Hundreds of police officers in riot gear charged and beat the demonstrators, including the female workers. Over 100 workers were reportedly injured.
Local sources also noted that workers have shown signs of poisoning due to exposure to chemical substances during production without adequate protection. At least 40 of them were still in hospital by the end of the year. One worker stated that three workers had died while some were paralysed as a result of the poisoning. The company stated that it was not a strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
but “a misunderstanding”.
In late January 2010, Hunan authorities sentenced Luo Xi to two years’ re-education through labour (RTL) for “disrupting social order.” Luo Xi, a resident of Shaoyang city, Hunan province, was detained in Beijing on 8 January 2010 and reportedly held in criminal detention upon his return to Shaoyang for taking part in a December 2008 teachers’ strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
in Hunan to demand wages and benefits comparable to those given to civil servants. While in detention he was reportedly forced to work 16 hours per day and only allowed to sleep four hours per night.
On 8 February 2010, the Shenzhen Intermediate People’s Court sentenced Xue Mingkai, a 20-year old factory security guard, to 18 months in prison on charges of “subversion of state power.” He was first detained in Bao’an, Shenzhen on 9 May 2009 and formally arrested on 15 June 2009. The charges claim that in the summer of 2006, Xue had planned to organise a “China Democratic Workers’ Party” online and that he had joined the overseas China Democracy Party (CDP) in 2009 and recruited other individuals.
On 30 March Xiao Qingshan, a labour activist, was accused of disturbing public order and detained for seven days of administrative punishment by the Yuexiu branch of the Guangzhou Municipal Public Security Bureau during an environmental protest. Xiao was previously detained in 2009 for attempting to commemorate the Tiananmen Square massacre anniversary, and in October 2007 he was detained for ten days in Dongguan reportedly for efforts to collect wages on behalf of migrant workers.
According to media reports, on 20 October 2010 Zhao Dongmin, another labour activist, was sentenced to three years in jail for “gathering a crowd to disrupt social order”. Zhao was first arrested in August 2009 after organising organising The process of forming or joining a trade union, or inducing other workers to form or join one. over 380 workers from about 20 state-owned enterprises (SOEs) to form a labour rights group (the Shaanxi Union Rights Defence Representative Congress) to monitor the restructuring of SOEs and report corruption and abuses of power. The group was officially banned in July 2009.
Production lines were stopped in a strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
at the Foshan Honda plant in May. The strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
led to Foshan Honda eventually offering 1,900 workers in Foshan a 24 to 32% pay raise. The strikers were prepared to accept an increase of their monthly wage by 800 Yuan and nothing less. After an initial strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
on 17 May Honda persuaded the workers to return to work the next day promising to consider the demands. However, when no deal had been struck by 21 May, the workers went back on strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
. Anticipating retaliation and no support from the official trade union, the two workers who led the strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
, Tan Guocheng and Xiao Lang, quit and left the workplace not long after the strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
. The negotiation representatives elected by the workers were also subject to pressure from both management and the government. On 4 June, after negotiations involving the local government in Foshan and Japanese executives, Honda agreed to the large pay raise, though short of the workers’ demands.
In June some 1,500 workers at the Honda Lock factory in Guangdong disrupted production for a week over pay. The dispute was finally resolved with management agreeing to increase wages. Previous strikes at Guangqi Honda were also resolved. In July, strikes broke out at another Honda parts factory, Sumitec Co. in Foshan, after workers demanded higher pay rates which they had calculated after researching comparative rates in the region. They also asked the company to apologise over its threats to fire 90 workers involved in the complaint and to promise not to lay off any employees for the next two years.
Strikers were also calling for the election of workers’ own representatives and the re-election of trade union officials after the union had done nothing to support them, siding instead with management. With the intervention of the upper level trade union, re-elections of the trade union officers were held at the Foshan Honda plant after the strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
.
Hundreds of further strikes were reported during May, June and July in car manufacturing and electronics in the south but also in Shanghai and Tianjin, and included strikes at other Honda and Toyota factories.
In May a wave of worker suicides was reported at the Foxconn Technology Group in Shenzhen, which manufactures for major computer companies including for Apple. Twelve workers jumped from the buildings or attempted to do so because of harsh working conditions and management practices. Ten died and the other two were seriously injured. The Foxconn group employs a total of nearly 800,000 workers in various plants in China. At least two more workers committed suicide later in 2010. Media reports state that Ma Xiangqian, the first worker to die in 2010, was 19 years old. He had worked an average of almost 10 hours a day with total pay averaging around USD 1 an hour.
In November up to 7,000 workers at the Foxconn Premier Image Technology (China) Ltd in Foshan staged a strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
over low pay. Workers reported that they had been threatened with dismissal if they did not return to work.
A report based on interviews with over 1,700 workers found that Hon Hai, Foxconn’s parent company, had long working hours, a “militaristic” work culture and mass employment of low-wage vocational college students and interns on production lines to cut costs. In the last few years many companies and multinationals such as Hon Hai have recruited from Chinese technical and vocational schools, paying lower wages and skimping on benefits. Hon Hai and Foxconn both dismissed the report.
Since the suicides, Hon Hai has pledged to improve the livelihood of its Chinese workers, but workers continue to claim excessive work. Probably as a result of poor publicity and rising labour costs, Foxconn is shifting its manufacturing bases from the south to poorer inland provinces.
On 24 August over a hundred workers protested outside the Gold Peak battery factory in Huizhou over the company’s inaction during negotiations for compensation of workers poisoned by cadmium during battery production. That night several worker representatives were surrounded and beaten by around 300 unknown thugs. Some of the leaders, including Yu Shaolan and Xian Fang, were seriously injured and had to be hospitalised. Workers at the factory reported that the men beating them claimed they had been paid 50 Yuan a day to do so.
Hundreds of workers involved in the manufacturing of cadmium batteries have been diagnosed with cadmium poisoning or excessive cadmium levels. Despite several years of worker action, Gold peak management has not reached a satisfactory agreement over compensation, treatment, prevention and support despite many promises.
On 10 October in Sichuan Province, over 3,000 workers protested against the beating to death of at least one migrant construction worker asking for back pay back pay Wages or benefits due an employee for past employment. Often awarded when the employee has been unfairly dismissed. Not to be confused with retroactive pay (delayed payment for work previously done at a lower wage rate). by the employer. The workers clashed with some 1,000 police, and about a dozen protesters were arrested. The demonstration broke up following promises of action by the local police.
On 9 October, eight migrant construction workers had asked their construction company, Jiaxun Labour Service Company, for their back pay back pay Wages or benefits due an employee for past employment. Often awarded when the employee has been unfairly dismissed. Not to be confused with retroactive pay (delayed payment for work previously done at a lower wage rate). but were beaten as a response. One man, Lei Yong, died as a result of the beating while another was sent to hospital.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike over poor working conditions and a planned merger. It was also claimed that the predominately female workforce was paid at least 50% less than male workers. The action blocked the adjacent highway. Anti-riot police were called in, and two workers were reportedly beaten and detained. The strike strike The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike ended after management agreed to negotiate.
Institutionalised discrimination against migrant workers from rural areas remains a serious problem despite recent legislation. They suffer from low wages and excessive working hours. This is especially holds for migrants working in construction sites and small construction venues were they have little avenues for redress in the event of non-payment of wages or other abuses.
For example, in December a group of over 30 young men attacked a group of migrant workers, one a woman in her 80s, with knives and iron pipes in Shanghai. The workers were seeking payment of unpaid salaries and had been occupying a third-floor office in the building for several days in protest against the owner, who they said owed them salaries totalling about two million Yuan (USD 300,548) from a construction project four years ago. Before the attack the case was being handled in a local court.
100 Equal Remuneration for Work of Equal Value (1951) 138 Minimum Age for Employment (1973) 182 Worst Forms of Child Labour Convention (1999)
Capital: Beijing
