 |
|
Five suspects stand trial at the Intermediate People's Court of Linfen in Shanxi Province in the case of the recent forced labor scandal. Kiln boss Wang Bingbing (2nd L), foreman Heng Tinghan (right) and alleged gangsters Zhao Yanbing (2nd Right), Heng Mingyang (C) and Liu Dongsheng are charged with illegal detention.(Xinhua Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, July 5 -- Five people went on trial in northern
China yesterday for their involvement in the brick kiln slave labor scandal that
shocked the country.
Those facing charges at the Intermediate People's
Court of Linfen in Shanxi Province are kiln boss Wang Bingbing, foreman Heng
Tinghan and hired guards Zhao Yanbing, Heng Mingyang and Liu Dongsheng.
They are each accused of illegal detention, forced
labor and mayhem, the court said.
As the case involved so many people, no verdict was
reached yesterday, the Xinhua News Agency quoted a court official surnamed Hu as
saying.
The trial will continue and a verdict will be reached
as soon as possible, Hu said.
However, the local media was unsatisfied with the
charges, saying the suspects should be also accused of human trafficking and
child labor.
The use of slave workers in northern and central
China, many of them children, caused public outrage across the country after 400
parents posted an online petition in late May, saying their missing children had
been sold to illegal brick kilns in Shanxi and Henan to work as slaves.
After the case was exposed, police raided a kiln in
Caosheng village in Hongtong County in Linfen and freed 31 workers, the youngest
of which was 14. They had been forced to work for up to 16 hours a day with
little food and no pay. Fierce dogs and thugs prevented them from escaping.
Investigations also found that a mentally disabled
worker named Liu Bao had died in November after being beaten with a shovel. He
was also later buried without proper documentation.
Foreman Heng was listed as the suspected chief
villain in the scandal and was captured in Central China's Hubei Province last
month after a nationwide manhunt.
Another of the so-called "thugs", Chen Zhiming, was,
as of July 3, 2007, still at large. The Ministry of Public Security has issued
an order for his arrest.
China's Criminal Law states that anyone who illegally
detains another person and causes severe body injury shall receive a minimum
sentence of three years. Capital punishment can be meted out if death is
involved.
Also yesterday in court, one victim, 17-year-old
Zhang Wenlong, who was seriously burnt by hot bricks, appealed for compensation
of 500,000 yuan ($66,000). Other victims have made similar requests, but for
lesser amounts, according to local media reports.
Xiao Han, a professor with China University of
Political Science and Law, said the victims should also receive State
compensation as the case might involve dereliction of duty on the part of the
local police and government officials.
At least one village-level Communist Party secretary
-- Wang Dongji, the father of kiln owner, Wang Bingbing -- has been expelled
from the Party.
The trial is expected to be the first of many
connected to the scandal.
Official figures show that a cleanup operation by
police has so far freed 591 workers from illegal kilns in Shanxi and Henan and
detained 168 suspects.
(Source: China Daily)