China Daily

Transient workers deserve respect

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Aphoto that went viral on social media platforms, captioned as homeless migrant workers sleeping outdoors on a roadside in the freezing cold of Beijing, which coincides with the city’s 40-day crackdown on rental homes that are potential fire hazards, has been identified as one from the 2015 earthquake in Nepal.

Despite the photo being misused, there have been concerns raised about the campaign since tenants of rental homes found to be “unsafe” in Beijing’s ongoing safety checks are being forced to leave en masse. But the city-wide campaign is not driven by a government agenda to get rid of the “low-end population” as some are suggesting.

The November 18 fire in Daxing District, which claimed 19 lives, was a reminder of the deadly potential unsafe rental homes pose, to which the authoritie­s have responded quickly with sweeping checks.

The campaign is necessary to ensure life safety given the rampant and unorderly renting in a large number of illegal constructe­d buildings especially in suburban areas in the capital city.

Yet we have to see the harsh truth that low-income, non-local residents, mostly transient workers from rural areas, seldom get the treatment they deserve for making our cities better places to live. Instead, they are more often viewed as a dispensabl­e, even unwelcome group by many.

And that the renters of residences in the capital suddenly found unsafe, even “illicit”, are being evicted on very short notice, a week maximum, amid the hostile winter winds blowing through the capital may indeed sound harsh.

The campaign could have been planned or implemente­d more carefully, say, to help provide those renters with temporary shelters.

This is a well-intentione­d campaign that has somewhat gone awry. Local authoritie­s admit some of campaign might have been carried out too hastily, but they are already taking steps to rectify this.

Portraying what is a necessary safety campaign as expelling those who are unwanted is thus irresponsi­ble and groundless, the authoritie­s stressed.

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