Orlando Sentinel

In Beijing, a mass eviction sparks outrage

Migrant workers homeless, forced to survive in the cold

- By Jonathan Kaiman jonathan.kaiman@latimes.com

BEIJING — Sun Di arrived in Beijing with a dream. In May, the 28-year-old moved to Zhouying village, a swath of low-budget apartment blocks on the city’s outskirts. He found a menial job at a pharmaceut­icals company, but aspired to start his own business. Then came the evictions. On Nov. 18, a fire tore through a cramped, lowbudget Beijing apartment building — one much like Sun’s — killing 19 people.

Authoritie­s responded by launching Beijing’s biggest eviction drive in at least a decade. Sun has found himself caught in its grip, suddenly displaced along with tens of thousands of other migrant workers from lessdevelo­ped cities and towns.

Officials have given little or no notice, leaving many people homeless in the freezing Beijing cold.

As social media sites have overflowed with pictures and videos of the evictions — migrant workers desperatel­y packing up their belongings, sleeping on curbs, dragging suitcases down streets littered with trash — Chinese citizens have reacted with a rare upswell of collective rage.

“Now all of the time and effort I’ve spent in Beijing have been in vain,” Sun said last week as he packed his last few belongings, bound for his hometown in nearby Hebei province. “The government is too cold-blooded, and I feel helpless and hopeless.”

Beijing is home to millions of migrant workers — constructi­on workers, shop owners, security guards and delivery people who moved to the city for a shot at a better life.

Yet, China maintains a draconian residence registrati­on system, barring the migrant workers from receiving social services enjoyed by local residents, such as access to health care and public schools. Critics say the system has created a permanent lower class — that the workers who built Beijing’s skyscraper­s cannot possibly afford to make the city their home.

On Nov. 20, two days after the fire, Beijing authoritie­s announced a 40-day campaign to rid the city of “unsafe” buildings, precipitat­ing a rush of inspection­s and tear-downs across the city. They focused on dark, subdivided apartments in suburban and industrial areas — the only ones many migrant workers can afford.

Beijing plans to cap its population at 23 million by 2020, to ameliorate traffic, save resources and promote the developmen­t of high-tech industries. According to official estimates, the city had 21.7 million “permanent” residents at the end of 2016. The precise number of migrants, called a “low-end population” in official documents, remains unclear.

The online response to the evictions has been swift. More than 100 Beijing intellectu­als signed a petition calling the campaign a “violation of human rights.” Nonprofit organizati­ons and volunteer networkers offered moving assistance, shelter and food. E-commerce and food delivery companies scrambled to find shelter for their now-homeless employees.

Some internet users compared the evictions to two other recent scandals. On Nov. 23, a People’s Liberation Army general under investigat­ion for corruption committed suicide, and a couple of weeks ago, several middleclas­s parents accused a kindergart­en of abusing their children with drugs and needles.

“I’ve heard Beijingers have a new greeting,” said one widely shared post on WeChat, the country’s most popular messaging app. “When you meet the low-end population, you ask, ‘Have you found a place to live?’ When you meet the middleclas­s population, you ask, ‘Is your child OK?’ When you meet the upper-class population, you ask, ‘Have the party discipline authoritie­s found you yet?’ ”

The scandals have come at a sensitive time, about a month after a political conclave that elevated Chinese President Xi Jinping — an avowed defender of the poor — as the country’s most powerful leader since Mao Zedong.

Authoritie­s have censored discussion of the evictions on social networking sites and restricted media coverage, according to a leaked circular published online by the California-based China Digital Times.

“Concerning the Beijing city campaign to regulate and purge illegal structures, all web portals immediatel­y shut down related special topic pages, control interactiv­e sections, refrain from reposting related content, and resolutely delete malicious comments,” it said.

Several posts offering charity to displaced migrant workers were censored. Links to critical articles on WeChat led to a screen containing the message: “This content cannot be seen because it violates regulation­s.”

“I really sympathize with these migrant workers,” Li Yanyan, a 38-year-old high school teacher in Beijing, said. “They come here, they work hard, and all they really want is to make some money to send home to their families.”

“I cannot imagine my life without them,” she said. “I buy my breakfast and vegetables from migrant workers. The delivery guys are migrant workers. The convenienc­e store outside my building — the one my whole family uses — is run by migrant workers. The guy who fixes my shoes and my husband’s bike is a migrant worker. My hairstylis­t is a migrant worker. My nanny is a migrant worker. Almost 90 percent of the services I use on a daily basis come from migrant workers. The quality of our lives depends on them.”

Sun Di’s village, Zhouying, is now a ghost town. Most storefront­s are vacant, empty water bottles and cigarette butts piled on their tile floors. Many of his neighbors have returned to their hometowns outside the city. Some have sought temporary shelter at local farmers’ homes at exorbitant prices.

Others have refused to leave.

A block away from Sun’s apartment, a 49-year-old who gave his name as Li remained in the small restaurant he managed.

“They’ve been moving people from dangerous houses into even more dangerous houses,” said Li, who declined to give his full name for fear of official retaliatio­n. “The government has blamed this apartment for being unsafe. But as long as you move out, they don’t care where you go.”

Li said authoritie­s cut the power to his apartment the day after the fire; and one day after that, a security guard told him he had three days to evacuate. His neighbors panicked.

“It was like fleeing a conflict zone,” he said.

He said he planned to return to his hometown in Jiangsu province, about 450 miles to the south, next month, once his 10-year-old daughter finishes her semester at a Beijing private school. Until then, he and his family have been quietly sneaking into his old apartment to sleep at night, always wary of police and security guards.

“Every night, at 11 or 12, security guys come in to check,” he said. “If they see your stuff and sheets are still there, they throw them out.”

 ?? FRED DUFOUR/GETTY-AFP ?? People carrying what belongings they could leave their homes after receiving eviction notices on the outskirts of Beijing.
FRED DUFOUR/GETTY-AFP People carrying what belongings they could leave their homes after receiving eviction notices on the outskirts of Beijing.

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