Archive for the 'poverty news' Category

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Deng Hongshu’s Homecoming and the plight of the Chinese migrants

newschina


“The only character to describe migrant workers is nan,” he said, tracing in even strokes the Chinese character for “difficult, not good” into his palm. “If we stay, it’s hard. If we go, it’s hard. Sure, this life has always been this way. But it’s especially tough now.”



Lauren Keane of  Washington Post Foreign Service Desk wrote a very poignant piece on the plight of millions of migrant workers in China as the country’s manufacturing base contracts in the light of the world economic crisis. The article focused on one man and his son and their uncertain journey back home.  Go to the link below to read more.


Chinese Migrants Return to Rural Roots

Washington Post



Posted by Bricks on Jan 5th 2009 | Filed in bricks, capitalism, migrants, news, poverty, poverty news, rural communities, urban migration | Comments (0)

NEWS SPOTLIGHT: On the World Financial Crisis and Poverty.

The world anxiously waits for the financial crisis to ebb as Wall Street battles its woes towards an uncertain future. Schadenfreude and panic have become very common words these days to describe what the rest of the world feels about whats happening to Wall Street and the US economy.  There are no parties or celebratory bashes though, for the world is deeply concerned.  There’s a lot of finger pointing going around as to whose to blame and as to where the free market economy got it wrong.  One writer talks about how China got it right.

While the world is so engrossed with what’s happening in Wall Street,  many seem to have forgotten that October 17 was World Anti Poverty Day.  There’s one crisis that many seem to have comfortably  forgotten, 3 billion people in this world are living in poverty.

Financial Crisis or not, poverty is still and should be a priority issue among every world citizen.  Its an issue that transcends race, color, gender, belief (or non-belief) and currency. Its OUR issue.

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Posted by Bricks on Oct 20th 2008 | Filed in capitalism, news, poverty news | Comments (0)

Paralympics. Tainted Milk. Millennium Development Goals.

Beijing Paralympics boosts China’s cause for disabled people (UN Official) Xinhua News

China winds fown Paralympics ( Wall Street Journal)

China baby milk toll may rise (BBC)

India and China way behind Millennium Development Goals (Express Health Care)

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Posted by Bricks on Sep 18th 2008 | Filed in news, olympics, poverty news | Comments (0)

Water. Poverty. Paralympics.

Water, not oil,  is China’s biggest shortage Seeking Alpha

China may raise poverty line to 80 million. Economic Times

Paralympic Games

And now for the games to change the minds and attitudes in China The Age

Paralympic Games to change China New Zealand Herald

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Posted by Bricks on Sep 10th 2008 | Filed in news, olympics, poverty news | Comments (0)

Facing AIDS & Living for Tomorrow, a Tianjin Experience. (Pt. 1)

Bricks contributor Vivencio Mercado writes this two part feature article for Bricks about living with AIDS in China. Recently, Bricks visited an AIDS support group in Tianjin that sought funding for expansion. Mr. Mercado came to Tianjin with Fr. Loftus for the meeting. He writes about his experience on meeting the people of Tianjin Hai He and the people who support them and reflects on the situation of PLAs (persons living with AIDS/HIV) in China. Some of the pictures that you are about to see are obscured to protect their identity.

Xiao Xuen

At first glance, Xiao Xuen, a twenty one year-old Tianjin native (China’s third largest city) is what you would call the quintessential modern urban Chinese youth. He is into the latest European male fashion, head to foot. His hairstyle is very Japanese. He is web savvy and maintains a blog of his own. And like the rest of China’s growing urbanized youth, Xiao Xuen is very sure of himself. You can tell this from his demeanor and even with the way he held his pen while I was interviewing him. However, there are two distinct qualities that make Xiao Xuen different from the rest from his peers – one is that he’s gay and the other is that he recently found out that he is HIV+. He is not alone in this. That day in Tianjin, where I was asked by Fr. Loftus, to come along to meet with an AIDS support group that will soon become a brick project for the Great Wall Appeal, I met 5 HIV+ gay men who were under 30. I must say that the experience upon these men and the people who support them was quite different from what I expected.

Xiao Xuen found out that he was HIV+ on the same day as the Wenchuan Earthquake. He went to a hospital in Tianjin complaining about a rash on his left leg, but didn’t expect that he was going to be diagnosed with HIV that day. True to his form, he did what any young Chinese urbanite would do in a time of personal crisis, he went online to look for any sort of solace in the thousands upon thousands of online forums that exist in the Chinese cyberspace. That’s how he found about Tianjin Hai He, an HIV/AIDS support group of gay PLAs in Tianjin that helps persons with HIV/AIDS like Xiao Xuen on how to deal and live with the disease.

Tianjin Hai He, Da Hua & Li Hu

Sitting around the conference the table with these 12 men and watching how they interact with each other, I began to realize that Tianjin Hai He is more of a community than a group. It is rather unique in a sense from other AIDS support groups because it was organized and founded by two of its members, Da Hua and Li Hu, who are both HIV+. It is a very young community itself, just 6 months old. Before 2008, Da Hua and Li Hu had sporadic one to one meetings in public parks with other gay men who were struggling to come to terms with being HIV+. Their discussions not only focused on education about the disease but also on support and counseling which many Chinese PLAs badly need. With more people asking for help, the need for a better and more secluded place for regular meetings became obvious. They looked for sponsorship from various NGOs. Bricks was one of the very few that responded.

Tianjin Hai He had very humble but inspiring beginnings. Da Hua and Li Hu were both products of Ditan Hospital’s Red Ribbon Foundation in Beijing. The Red Ribbon Foundation provides counseling and support to persons living with AIDS/HIV. Many of the people who seek solace from The Red Ribbon come from many parts of China. Da Hua, who is pushing 60, was inspired by the work of the sisters and health workers in The Red Ribbon Foundation. He is a frequent visitor of The Red Ribbon. He makes it a point to go to Beijing from Tianjin to get his medication at Ditan Hospital. Although he tells us that there are hospitals in Tianjin that actually cater to “people with his disease” (his words), he prefers going to Ditan Hospital where the Red Ribbon Foundation is located because there he doesn’t get the “looks”. “Ditan’s Red Ribbon Foundation has a more personal feel to it”, Da Hua says. “If I could only bring this kind of support that the Red Ribbon Foundation gives to us to Tianjin then it would not only be helping me but also a lot of people infected with AIDS in Tianjin.” That’s how Tianjin Hai He began. With Li Hu’s sense of management and leadership and Da Hua’s charismatic personality the two were able to persuade other PLAs in Tianjin to actually face and deal with the reality of the disease, not alone, but with a community.

To date, Tianjin Hai He has 22 members and is still growing. They have different age, social and economic backgrounds. In an ordinary situation, you would not find these men in one room discussing anything. In Tianjin Hai He, the overall feel of the group is quite relaxed, familiar and friendly. It seems to me that the disease is not the the only important topic in their gatherings. I even dare to think that it comes second or third. They talk about the education and ways of preventing infection, and the problems that they face in their families and workplace, yes. But I think the more vital thing that occurs in these meetings is that each of the members experience a sense of the mundane. They talk about the latest gossip and the television shows that they have been glued to lately. They make fun of each other’s mannerisms, clothing and speaking. They don’t come to these meetings to lament at the fact that they have HIV/AIDS. They come to these meetings to experience the mundane aspects of life together. They cherish the ordinary things, mundane things that many people, people like me, have taken for granted.

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Posted by Vivencio Mercado on Jul 6th 2008 | Filed in AIDS, Tianjin, bricks, feature, poverty news | Comments (1)

China passes law on enchanced protection for disabled. Police chief vows protection of rights and dignity of rural migrants. (Xinhua)

China’s new law on protection of the disabled effective July 1

Several new Chinese laws and regulations, including the amended Law on Protection of the Disabled, will take effect on Tuesday.

The amendment is aimed at improving protection of the country’s more than 83 million disabled ahead of the 2008 Paralympics in September. China’s top legislator, Wu Bangguo, told a meeting of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress in April: “Caring for the disabled is a sign of social progress and an important part of building a harmonious society.

It showcases the country’s avowed respect for human rights in its constitution.

A revision of a 1991 law, the amendment was drawn up to “tackle new circumstances and problems” cropping up amid economic and social advances, according to Civil Affairs Minister Li Xueju.

The amendment added details about financial support, medical care and rehabilitation services for the disabled, along with preferential policies on jobs and taxes.

Governments at the county level or above should provide stable funding and draw up annual plans to help the disabled, it said.

It stressed the need to build and improve physical facilities that would make it easier for the disabled.

Beijing will host the Paralympics in September, while the AsianPara Games will be held in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, in 2010.

According to the China Disabled Persons’ Federation, the country has about 83 million disabled, accounting for 6.34 percent of the population. More than 75 percent of the disabled live in rural areas.

China’s police chief vows to protect “dignity”, rights of rural migrants

Chinese State Councilor and Public Security Minister Meng Jianzhu pledged to protect the rights of rural migrants by cracking down on abuses of their “dignity” and civil rights on Monday.

At the year’s first plenary conference of the leading group for security management of migrants, under the Central Committee of Comprehensive Management of Public Security, he urged all authorities “to provide timely, appropriate and sufficient services” for the country’s 210 million migrants.

Meng described migrants as vital to the building of a prosperous society and “part owners” of the achievements of economic and social development. The Party and the government were duty-bound to provide high-quality services and management, he said.

Local officials should listen to migrants and try hard to meet their demands, so as to improve services and management, said Meng, who is also a deputy director of the central committee and head of the leading group.

They should enjoy equal employment opportunities and employment services, improved housing and schooling for their children, and better integration with local residents, he said.

He urged companies to sign labor contracts and pledged to crackdown on unpaid wages, while encouraging trade unions to protect their rights.

Posted by Bricks on Jul 2nd 2008 | Filed in migrants, people with disabilities, policy, poverty news | Comments (0)

100 Days Till Eviction

With only 100 days before the Olympics, Beijingers all over Beijing are making preparations in their own homes to welcome the Games with Chinese and Olympic flags hanging over their doorsteps and . The city is hyped up with the Olympic spirit and finishing touches are almost to a close. Beijingers are anticipating the big event in August, all except Mr. Sun Yonglian. Tania Branigan of The Guardian tells his story.

100 days until the Olympics - but one family awaits only bulldozers and eviction

Tania Branigan

Copyright The Guardian.co.uk

As he stands on his roof, scanning the horizon of Yangshan Park, Sun Yonglian knows the clock is ticking. With only 100 days to go before the Olympics begin in the city, the final preparations are underway.

At the entrance, workmen heft paving slabs, eager to finish one of Beijing’s last beautification projects. There’s just one problem: Sun’s house is in the way.

Three years ago, this wasteland was a bustling village. But grassy slopes, lakes and walkways will soon erase all trace of his house. Hundreds of his neighbours have already made way for the new park. Last week officials threw out Wang Lianmin and tore down his home. Days later, Su Xiangyu caved in to the pressure and left. With even those diehards gone, Sun is the last man standing.

The Olympic construction boom has displaced tens of thousands of Beijingers and destroyed numerous traditional neighbourhoods. Most residents gave up the fight long ago.

But as a bulldozer rakes what remains of his neighbours’ homes, Sun continues to watch and wait for the first glimpse of an eviction party.

“They might demolish the house at any time. I feel very scared in my heart - scared and lonely,” he says. “If they come by force I will try my best to negotiate with them. If they don’t negotiate with me, I have no other way. I can only pour petrol [around] and be burnt together with the people who have come for us.

“I can’t let them do this - take my things so easily and cheaply.”

He speaks calmly, but has covered the building with dry branches and stored jerry cans of petrol in a sideroom. His parents in law and young son have been sent to the countryside for safety. Now only Sun, his wife Chen Zongxia, her cousin and his wife are left. The family were doing well before the demolition notice arrived. His mother in law was born here and the house has sheltered four generations, providing not just a home but a livelihood. Renting out the spare rooms earned enough to support the household of seven.

But Yangshan is opposite the main Olympic park and the Chaoyang district government said the village had to go. It offered Sun’s family 4,300 yuan (£310) a square metre in compensation, but he says housing nearby costs 12,000 yuan and even further out in the countryside it would be 8,000 yuan.

“Renting out our rooms meant I could stay at home to look after my parents and children. If we went to the countryside, I would have to try to find a job and there would be no one to care for them,” said Chen. “Our son’s school is here and we would have to pay new fees for a school in the countryside - and it wouldn’t be as good.”

Most of the village’s 550 households moved away three years ago, but a handful of homeowners were determined to fight. They hoped that a legal claim for increased compensation might resolve the situation. But while the offer increased slightly, the forced evictions also began.

“One day in 2006, four families were forced out. Ambulances and fire trucks came and in all there were about 200 people,” he recalled.

“The situation was very frightening. Some villagers tried to film what was happening but the police grabbed their cameras away.”

Then, last month, a notice arrived to warn the last households they had three days to leave. Their water was cut off at the start of April. The bulldozers arrived days later.

“Everything started shaking - it was like an earthquake. Parts of the ceiling fell in,” Sun said, showing the hole where a lump of plaster broke off.

“I feel very anxious every day. I spend all my time waiting.”

North Star, the company developing Yangshan, told the Guardian it had strictly followed the government’s policies.

Its spokesman Mr Luo, who did not give his full name, added: “We are very careful about this job and we accept supervision. There should not be problems if the residents accept the government’s regulations. If there is a problem, it is usually because they asked more than the government’s policies promised. Both sides can negotiate within the policies.”

Some Beijingers have welcomed resettlement, even if it meant exchanging homes in the centre for housing in the suburbs. Those who got adequate compensation could swap cramped, dilapidated conditions for clean, new flats with modern facilities.

At a briefing on the issue earlier this year, Beijing officials said that compensation was set at market rates and that some people gained extra rights to welfare by being allowed to register as urban rather than rural residents for the first time.

But in the same month, the grassroots organisation Citizens’ Rights and Livelihood Watch warned: “Although the government made some efforts to compensate for the losses of these villagers, many incidents of deprivation and abuses occurred and villagers’ efforts to seek redress were suppressed. Reportedly, villagers were not compensated fairly and adequately.”

To add to their anger, those removed from Yangshan - and other areas - fear that Olympic projects are clearing the way for lucrative future schemes.

Sun says that the developers plan to build on the south side of the new park, and that the first resettlement notice made no mention of the Games.

“When the Olympics were given to Beijing we were extremely happy,” he said. “But this area is neither a stadium nor an Olympic park. It’s only a business project.

“When the local government acts like this under the name of the Olympics, my feelings are inexpressible.”

Posted by Bricks on May 1st 2008 | Filed in poverty news, urban poverty | Comments (0)

NPR features 3 Chinese Brothers’ Lives that Reflect China’s Growing Income Gap

National Public Radio reporter Frank Langfitt tells a story about three Chinese brothers in Beijing who spent their youth during the Cultural Revolution and lived under one roof for decades. Their lives changed after their home was demolished to pave way for China’s development as the county transformed itself from a socialist economy to a market economy. The starking difference among these 3 brothers’ lives today mirrors the ever growing gap between China’s affluent and deprived. This is a two parter feature by The National Public Radio in which audio versions are available on their website. Read the complete text after the jump. Continue Reading »

Posted by Bricks on Apr 23rd 2008 | Filed in poverty news | Comments (0)

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