China: China Opens Investigation Into Slave Labor Scandal
16 June 2007 -- China has opened a national investigation into a slave labor scandal in central China, where as many as 1,000 people are believed to have been forced into a brutal human trafficking ring.
China's official Xinhua news agency says a team of investigators will be sent to brick kilns and coal mines in Shanxi and Henan provinces, where more than 500 people, many of them children, have been freed in recent days. Officials say they believe hundreds more could be trapped at the work sites.
Media reports say the owners of the kilns ran their operations like prisons, with thugs who beat children and used fierce dogs to maintain control. Reports also describe the workers as having been beaten and starved.
Police say 24 suspects have been detained so far in a raid.
Tens of thousands of officers were involved in the three-day raid at 7,500 brick kilns in the two provinces.
Some reports say children were abducted from train stations and sold to brickmakers. One kiln owner says he paid $50 for a boy.
Reports say police believe the slave trade has been going on since at least March, and possibly for years.
Source: VOA News
Related articles
- Senator Durbin Investigates Global Internet Freedom
- IOC President Says Beijing Games will Endure Despite 'Crisis'
- Speaker Pelosi Statement on San Francisco Olympic Torch Relay
- Senators to Introduce a Resolution to Condemn Violence in Tibet
- Senators Boxer, Brown and Snowe Lead Call on China to Resolve Crisis in Tibet
Latest stories
- Statement by Senator Barack Obama on EU Emergency Summit Meeting
- Barack Obama Statement on the Resignation of Japanese Prime Minister Fukuda
- Senator Barack Obama's Statement on the Third Anniversary of Hurricane Katrina
- Statement from Sarah and Todd Palin Regarding Unwed Teen Daughter's Pregnancy
- White House Press Gaggle by Dana Perino and FEMA Administrator Dave Paulison -- September 1, 2008
- Zimbabwe District Calls for Renewed Government Effort on Solar Energy
- Thousands of Anti-War Protesters March to Site of Republican Convention
- US: More than 11,000 Iraqi Detainees Released in 2008
- DoD Identifies Navy Casualty: Petty Officer 1st Class Joshua Harris, 36,of Lexington, North Carolina
- DoD Identifies Army Casualty: Spc. Steven J. Fitzmorris, 26, of Columbia, Missouri
Yes We Can
Yes We Can:

















