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13-03-2016, 03:00 PM
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Demanding pay, Chinese miners protest over governor's claim
by Didi Tang, Associated Press
The Jakarta Post Breaking NewsToday
False hope: In this Oct. 6, 2015 photo, a miner works underground in the Sewell False hope: In this Oct. 6, 2015 photo, a miner works underground in the Sewell "R" coal mine in Yukon, W.Va. For the long-suffering communities that depend on coal, a recent Supreme Court ruling temporarily blocking greenhouse gas reductions was seen as a rare victory. But coal country residents say the reprieve may only be temporary as utilities turn away from coal generation and production continues to slide. (AP/David Goldman, File)

Thousands of Chinese miners who say they have not been paid for months staged a rare protest in a northeastern city, days after the provincial governor made the apparently false claim that no miner working for the province's largest publicly-owned mining company was owed any back wages.

Angry miners from the Longmay Mining Holding Group Co., Ltd. and their family members marched through the city of Shuangyashan on Saturday and gathered in front of the company's local offices.

In response, the government of Heilongjiang province issued a statement Saturday night acknowledging that many Longmay employees are owed wages and benefits, backtracking from Governor Lu Hao's assertions earlier this month.

The protest and the change in the government's stance underline the sensitivity of the employment issue, as Chinese miners and others in state industries are losing their jobs or seeing their pay drastically cut. China's massive state-owned mining companies are struggling to boost efficiency and reduce their payrolls amid a severe a slump in coal demand brought on by sharply slowing economic growth.

The pain is particularly acute in China's northeastern rustbelt, where Heilongjiang is located. Its biggest state-owned mining company, Longmay, is tasked with reducing its workforce by 22,500 people in the immediate future, according to state media reports.

Longmay reportedly owed 800 million yuan ($123 million) in back pay for 2014. A lengthy investigative report by China's leading financial news group Caijing reported in January that pay for Longmay workers has been continually cut, and even those reduced wages had not been paid for three to four months.

Then on March 6 Lu, considered a rising political star, said at the national legislature's annual session that Longmay's 80,000 miners hadn't received a single cut in wages and all were paid on time. The remarks seemed aimed at showing that Longmay and the province were meeting the leadership's expectations for competently handling economic challenges.

Calls to local police, government offices and Longmay rang unanswered on Sunday, but witnesses told The Associated Press that thousands of workers took part in the demonstration. A local resident who gave just his last name, Li, said the protesters were holding banners demanding back pay. Li said he knew of Longmay workers who had not been paid for six months.

Another eyewitness, who gave her last name as Wang said she has family members working for the mines. She said their wages were cut to less than 1,000 yuan ($154) per month, and the workers either did not receive their full wages or were not paid at all for months.

She said the protesters displayed a banner reading: "We need to eat. We need to live."

Both Li and Wang said the protest was peaceful and that a large number of riot police had been dispatched to the scene. They said the demonstrations ended around 4 p.m.

The provincial statement came out after 9 p.m. Saturday, saying Lu had held a special meeting on Longmay in Beijing that afternoon.

The statement made no mention of the protest in Shuangyashan but said Longmay had failed to pay wages, taxes and insurance contributions. It said the provincial government would work with Longmay to raise money and to make every effort to pay the workers in time.

The statement did not mention Lu's earlier remarks, but hinted he had been fed false information.

"Should important information be reported inaccurately again, it will be dealt with seriously," the statement said. (**)


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