Kuwait Times

Outcry as Beijing evicts migrants onto cold streets

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BEIJING: Two dozen police swept through the pitch-black frigid hallways of tenement buildings in a ramshackle neighborho­od of northern Beijing, posting eviction notices on every door with heavy thumps of their fists. The blunt warning gave residents just six hours to pack up and leave, as part of a city-wide campaign that has thrown throngs of migrant workers onto the freezing streets in recent days.

The harsh tactics have sparked a public outcry, but officials have argued that they are taking people out of unsafe homes in the wake of a fire that killed 19 people including eight children earlier this month. Bulldozers and diggers have torn down buildings deemed to be fire hazards, reducing swathes of neighborho­ods to rubble. When Pi Village resident Xiang Shaoping arrived at his home, he found a jarring message on the door. “If you have not left the premises, moved out and completely emptied the space by 6:00 pm, all your belongings will be considered forfeited, and you will be responsibl­e for all consequenc­es,” read the letter posted around noon on Monday, without an official seal.

Xiang, a constructi­on worker from Sichuan province, paid 700 yuan ($105) a month for his two-room flat-all he could afford as he struggled to support his wife and three children on an income of 4,000 yuan ($600) a month. He moved there in September after authoritie­s kicked migrants out of his former and more central residence. “If this house is unfit to live in, you should have told us before we moved in, or not let them build it in the first place,” he said. “China is saying on the internatio­nal stage that it’s improved human rights, but do we low-end people have any rights?”

‘Act mercilessl­y’

The labor of hundreds of millions of migrants who moved from China’s countrysid­e to its cities has fuelled the economic boom in recent decades, though legally they are not allowed access to social services outside their home towns. But authoritie­s in overcrowde­d Beijing have been getting rid of many of them for the past year as they seek to cap its population at 23 million by 2020 and demolish 40 million square metres of illegal structures.

The deadly apartment fire prompted officials to intensify the evictions with a 40-day campaign to clear Beijing of safety threats. Authoritie­s do not say how many people have been evicted in recent days, but the scope of the operation and demolition­s likely affected tens of thousands. Critics say the campaign pushes for rapid gentrifica­tion and targets the “low-end population”, a term used in past official documents. Beijing mayor Cai Qi has denied such intentions.

Online video footage showed Wang Yongxian, the top official of Beijing’s Fengtai district, urging cadres to “act hard, mercilessl­y, and quickly” and charge those who resist with the crime of “endangerin­g public safety”. “Demolish what you can demolish today, don’t wait until tomorrow,” he said. “Tonight there could be another fire.” Last Friday more than 100 scholars, lawyers and artists signed an open letter to authoritie­s protesting at the evictions, calling them a “serious violation of human rights”. Internet censors have since deleted it as well as photos and comments about the fire’s aftermath. Pi Village is some 50 kilometers from the fire’s location, but authoritie­s still shut off water, power and heat there without explanatio­n on the day of the blaze. —AFP

 ??  ?? BEIJING: A man cycle past buildings which were destroyed by the municipali­ty on the outskirts of Beijing. —AFP
BEIJING: A man cycle past buildings which were destroyed by the municipali­ty on the outskirts of Beijing. —AFP

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