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Military版 - 共产党说话做事,就象放屁一样
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话题: beijing话题: migrants话题: she话题: china话题: government
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d*b
发帖数: 4453
1
共产党说话做事,就象放屁一样! 不敢信,不能信,不可信。谁信谁傻逼!
For Decades, China's Laborers Moved To Cities. Now They're Being Forced Out

December 6, 2017·11:17 AM ET
Authorities have given residents in Jiugong Township of Beijing, many of
whom are migrant laborers, just days to clear out before they shut off all
electricity and water.
The streets and alleys of Jiugong Township on Beijing's southern fringes are
strewn with rubble from demolished buildings and piles of abandoned clothes
and household items.
Authorities have given residents of this migrant laborer enclave just days
to clear out before they shut off all electricity and water this week.
In one back alley, two women, their clothes and hair covered in dust,
struggle to move heavy furniture out of their ramshackle homes and onto the
street, where they pile it onto carts. Nearby, eggshells, a cleaver and bits
of vegetables sit on a chopping board in a makeshift outdoor kitchen. It's
in a courtyard made up of small, one-room dwellings, all rented by migrants.
"This is too unfair to us common folk," one of the women says with a sigh.
She spoke on condition of anonymity because she fears the government will
punish her.
"We've suffered too much. After all the years we've worked here, we have to
throw everything away and return home," she says.
The woman comes from a poor part of northern China's Henan Province. She and
her husband have been in the capital for over a decade, selling building
materials and decorating homes.
Beijing's eviction of migrants, which started last month, and reports of
heavy-handed tactics by authorities have sparked one of the biggest
political controversies of the year in China. Along with the capital Beijing
, migrants are also being pushed out of other large cities such as Shanghai
and Guangzhou. In doing so, the government is reversing the flow of labor
from the countryside to cities that has marked the past four decades of
economic reforms and growth.
With the evictions, curbside breakfast vendors, cobblers, locksmiths and
deliverymen have disappeared as their homes have been razed. Some lifelong
Beijing residents, recent graduates and white-collar workers have also been
displaced.
Even though they're Chinese, they're considered migrants because of the
country's household registration system, known as hukou. Residency is
determined by one's birthplace.
The government's grand plan is to cap Beijing's population at 23 million —
roughly a million more than now — and move non-essential, labor-intensive
industries such as manufacturing and wholesaling out of the city.
A fire last month in southern Beijing's Daxing district that killed 19
people seems to have sped up the process. After that, the Beijing municipal
government gave districts until the end of December to demolish illegal and
unsafe housing. Shops, factories, warehouses and apartment blocks used by
migrants are also being targeted.
Retired Tsinghua University historian Qin Hui argues that local Chinese
governments usually turn a blind eye to these slums until there is a fire or
they need the land. Suddenly, the migrants' homes become "illegal
structures" and are razed. Qin argues that by doing this, the government is
essentially criminalizing urban migrant enclaves.
"If they just fix up the fire exits, there shouldn't be any hazards to
people living here," the woman from Henan Province argues. "They're just
being unfair to migrants."
While the government says it has held job fairs to help displaced migrants,
and helped others with transportation back to their homes in the countryside
, this woman says nobody has helped her.
Debris is left behind after migrants moved out of a building in the Jiugong
Township of Beijing.
The woman salvages a few last odds and ends and stuffs them into plastic
bags. She loads them onto her scooter and rides off into the freezing
streets.
It's unclear how many of Beijing's roughly 8 million migrants will be
evicted. Municipal officials declined to be interviewed.
The mass evictions aren't really necessary, says Yi Fuxian, a population
expert at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, because the Beijing migrant
population has already peaked.
"Even if the government didn't drive them out, the flow of migrants will
eventually reverse itself," he says.
Migrants are already leaving Beijing because its too expensive, he says, and
their hometowns in the hinterland have started to get factory jobs, high-
speed rail and Internet access.
People walk on a street in a Beijing migrant enclave, part of which has been
slated for demolition.
Yi says if the migrants leave Beijing, the capital could end up looking like
China's rust belt. Beijing's population is aging, and migrants now account
for more than half of residents between the ages of 20 and 39.
"This is the most glorious age in Beijing's history," Yi argues. "If you
stay in Beijing for another decade, you will witness the city's decline."
Because the hukou system deprives them of urban services such as education
and healthcare, many migrants leave their children and parents in the
countryside.
That arrangement has now become unsustainable. Many migrants say they're
willing to be paid a bit less in order to work closer to home.
Yi contends that China's economic center is undergoing a historic shift,
away from the major cities and export enclaves of the coast, heading toward
the country's southwest, where wages are lower, workers are younger and
fertility rates are higher.
Chinese intellectuals, meanwhile, have petitioned the government to halt the
evictions in Beijing, calling them a violation of human rights. Even some
state media have criticized the campaign.
What angers many, says Yi, is that the government has called migrants a "low
-end population," basically implying that they're inferior human beings.
"China didn't just say this, they actually wrote it into government
documents," he fumes. "This is absurd."
On Chinese social media, criticism of the eviction of migrants has been
heavily censored.
Another migrant woman struggling to stay in Beijing has fled the demolition
of one storefront after another. Now she and her husband are making their
last stand in Jiugong Township.
For nearly seven years, they have supported a family of six with their hard
work in Beijing. She also asked for anonymity, fearing punishment by
authorities.
Like many migrants, she gets angry when she remembers the theme song of the
Beijing Olympics nearly a decade ago. It was called "Beijing Welcomes You."
"In 2008, Beijing welcomed us," she recalls. "Last year, they started to
show us migrants the door. This year, they're trying to kick us out
altogether."
http://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2017/12/06/568315650/for-decades-
chinas-laborers-moved-to-cities-now-they-re-being-forced-out
d*b
发帖数: 4453
2
李总理说让农民进城,蔡书记说,全他妈的低端人口,统统给我滚蛋,不听话就刺打见
红。
u*****E
发帖数: 2476
3
第三张照片像圆明园南门西边挂甲屯北边

Out
are
clothes

【在 d*b 的大作中提到】
: 共产党说话做事,就象放屁一样! 不敢信,不能信,不可信。谁信谁傻逼!
: For Decades, China's Laborers Moved To Cities. Now They're Being Forced Out
:
: December 6, 2017·11:17 AM ET
: Authorities have given residents in Jiugong Township of Beijing, many of
: whom are migrant laborers, just days to clear out before they shut off all
: electricity and water.
: The streets and alleys of Jiugong Township on Beijing's southern fringes are
: strewn with rubble from demolished buildings and piles of abandoned clothes
: and household items.

1 (共1页)
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相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: beijing话题: migrants话题: she话题: china话题: government