Posts Tagged communist

China’s controversial Polish contract

At a dusty building site on the fringes of Warsaw, globalisation has just taken its latest twist – and it’s one which will send tremors through Europe’s construction industry.

Two decades after the fall of communist rule, a Polish government with an almost fundamentalist commitment to the free market has awarded contracts for two large motorway sections to a Chinese state-owned company that won the job with a dramatic knock-down bid.

It is the first time the Chinese have won such a contract in Poland and it is believed to be a first within the EU.

But instead of just cutting the price, they slashed it to pieces, offering to build the road for 60% less than the guide price – saving taxpayers millions, but leaving many wondering how they can do it so cheaply without pain.

Work is already under way on the interchange where the Lodz-Warsaw motorway will arrive in the Polish capital.

Stopping the traffic to allow heavy construction lorries to turn, Artur – clad in a hard hat and luminous jacket – says he is “very surprised”.

“The Chinese probably work cheaply,” he says.

Social fears

The Chinese Overseas Engineering Group (Covec), has told the Polish authorities it will employ EU workers, but fears persist that it will ship in cheap labour from China to complete the job.

“Of course they can bring Chinese workers with them to help with the construction,” says Andrzej Maciejewski of the Polish Roads Agency (GDDKIA) that awarded the contract.

But “first of all, they will hire the workers from our market,” he adds.

He also says that Covec will have to obey Polish and EU employment laws, and comply with working hours and minimum wage regulations.

It’s a good challenge for Europe to have lower-cost workers

Hanna Gronkiewicz-Waltz - Mayor of Warsaw

But nevertheless the fear that the Chinese company will practice wage dumping is very real.

Andrew Kureth, editor of the Warsaw Business Journal, has watched Chinese firms in action in Poland.

“The Chinese companies are bringing in their own workers from abroad,” he says.

He cites a Chinese company building an apartment block next to his home using only Asian workers.

“If that continues to happen I think there is a possibility there will be a social outcry here.”

With many Polish builders working in the UK and perceived by some to be undercutting UK pay rates, it is ironic that their jobs at home could now be filled by Chinese workers.

A spokesman for the the European Investment Bank, which is lending much of the money, said that for the bid to be legal, proper procurement procedures would have been followed.

‘Chinese effect’

There are also indications that the Polish authorities are using Chinese bidders to drive down costs.

When Warsaw felt the bids for its new underground train line were too high, it got the Chinese to bid.

The Chinese did not win that time, but their competitors slashed their prices drastically in response.

It has been called the “Chinese effect”, says Michael Dembinski of the British-Polish Chamber of Commerce.

Polish officials say local workers must be hired first

“We need to look at the scale of this,” he says.

“If the Chinese bring over tens of thousands of labourers there will be unease about this.”

“If it’s a question of a couple of hundred skilled engineers, that’s not going to be too much of an issue.”

The mayor of Warsaw, Hanna Gronkiewicz-Waltz, formerly Vice President of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, says the company will probably employ a mixture of Chinese and local workers.

“It’s a good challenge for Europe to have lower-cost workers,” she says.

Asked to comment on the fact that a government committed to free market principles has awarded a contract to a Chinese state-owned company, she is unapologetic.

“Countries in the West should reform their economies,” she says.

A spokesman for the European Internal Market Commissioner said they were not investigating the contract and there was “insufficient information to see if it was within the rules or not”.

This might be the first motorway contract for the Chinese in the EU but it is unlikely to be the last.

But with tension mounting in the UK, in particular, over the employment of foreign contract labour, the authorities in Warsaw and Brussels will need to tread very carefully.

via BBC NEWS | Asia-Pacific | China’s controversial Polish contract .

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Beijing Censors News on Fall of Berlin Wall Anniversary

As the 60th anniversary of the communist takeover of China approaches, not only has Beijing strengthened Internet blockage and control, but the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has also restrained mainland media from reporting on “sensitive” international events.
The participation of well-known Chinese artists in the “Mauersteine (Wall of Bricks)” event commemorating the twentieth anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall is one of them.

Earlier, Germany sent reproductions of segments of the Berlin Wall to artists around the world in hopes of them bringing unique creative reproductions of the symbolic wall pieces to commemorate the historic moment. China received four of the 1,000 polystyrene reproductions of these Berlin Wall segments, which were passed on to internationally famous artists Huang Rui, Wang Guangyi, Xu Bing and Zhang Xiaogang by the Goethe Institute in Beijing which participated in the artwork re-creation.

The final sections were exhibited at the German Embassy in China on August 13 and then sent to Germany on August 21. They will be exhibited along with all the pieces created out of the “wall of bricks” from other countries on November 9, along the one-time location of the Berlin Wall, and then symbolically toppled like dominoes.

Ms. Zhu, public relations officer from Beijing’s Goethe Institute told a Radio Free Asia (RFA) overseas reporter, after learning his identity, that she “has to be careful. The propaganda department of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party has issued a written [censorship] notice, [which] really cares about this [identifying process]. So I had to ask [your identity]. The [BerlinWall] event is co-hosted by the Goethe Institute and the German Embassy. Four pretty famous artists worked together on this in China. [They] completed this artwork with their own styles. The opening ceremony was held on August 13. Germany’s Ambassador Michael Schaefer made a speech, as did the artists invited by the Director of the Goethe Institute. Many news media were at the ceremony. Then each of the four artists introduced their work.”

1989: The Berlin Wall fell and democracy was crushed at Tiananmen Square
The RFA reporter asked Ms. Zhu to respond to reports that the CCP’s propaganda department does not allow the commemoration of the event to be reported. Ms. Zhu confirmed this with her reply that, “Many news media came to the German Embassy to get interviews on the August 13 opening day. We were all excited, and we had a very good environment at the time. The ambassador spoke about the origin and course of the event for a long time. However, due to the propaganda department’s prohibition of mentioning the year of 1989, reporters had a hard time reporting [the Berlin Wall event].”

The reason is clear: The Berlin Wall fell in 1989. Two of the Chinese artists participating in the commemoration of the fall of the Berlin Wall displayed images of the year ‘1989’ in their “wall of bricks” art pieces. All-German Dispatch Correspondent’s news reported on August 24 that the fall of the Berlin Wall represented the fall of Eastern Europe’s communist parties, so in mainland China, [the authority] has ordered a ban on reporting any related commemoration activities.

A former reporter from China Youth Daily, Li Datong, believes that even without any reference to 1989 appearing in the artists’ works, the CCP still would strictly restrain the media from reporting on events related to memorializing the fall of the Berlin Wall. He said, “[They] are afraid of causing people to associate anything in their minds. The fall of the Berlin Wall associates with the collapse of the regime.”

Gao Yu, a senior media person said, “If so, it is easy for people to connect [the fall of the Berlin Wall] to the June 4, 1989 incident. Right now, the regime finds something suspicious everywhere it looks. They don’t dare to memorialize anything related to a regime change. They are afraid of discussing any related content, as [people will] easily link them to China’s acute social conflicts.”

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