Wednesday, December 17, 2008

With strikes, China's middle class vents anger

With strikes, China's middle class vents anger

Actions have caught a government fearful of labor movements off guard

Image: Strike in Chongqing, China
Str / AFP - Getty Images
Police arrive to inspect an overturned taxi after a mob of angry drivers attacked those who refused to join a strike in southwest China's Chongqing city on Nov. 3.
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updated 3:01 a.m. ET, Wed., Dec. 17, 2008

CHONGQING, China - When 9,000 of Shin Guoqing's fellow taxi drivers went on strike early last month, he felt he had to join them.

Soaring inflation had undermined what his $300-a-month income could buy for his family, and Shin said he was frustrated that the government had done nothing to help. "After running around the whole day, you have only a few renminbi for it," he said, referring to China's currency. "You don't feel good about your life."

For two days, the drivers held this Sichuan province metropolis of 31 million people under siege, blocking roads and smashing cars. The Communist Party quickly stopped the violence by promising to address the drivers' demands for easier access to fuel and better working conditions.

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