Chartered flight takes migrant workers home for Spring Festival (Xinhua) Updated: 2006-01-23 14:43
Li Qiujing, 24, felt she was a lucky dog indeed when she boarded an airplane
for the first time in her life.
The textile worker at Baode Apparels Co. was one of the 130 migrant workers
in Quanzhou, a manufacturing base in east China's Fujian Province, who were
privileged to take a chartered flight to their hometown in southwestern Sichuan
Province Sunday, a week before the Chinese New Year.
The special flight was sponsored by the Quanzhou Trade Union and 46 local
businesses who have set up trade unions to safeguard the migrant workers' rights
and interests.
Most of the 130 passengers' fares were subsidized by the trade unions: 26
people from poverty-stricken counties were offered a free trip and the others
paid no more than 300 yuan each (37.5 U.S. dollars), about the same price as a
train ticket.
"It's my third trip home in eight years," said Peng Guohua, 42. "My previous
two train rides during the pre-holiday rush were extremely tiring, crowded and
took two or three days each."
Peng and Li are both workers at Baode Apparels Co.. "We two feel really
lucky. But it's a pity so few people have the privilege -- we have at least 100
fellow townspeople at the company," she said.
"Peng and Li are among our best employees," said Gong Yichang, president of
the company's trade union. "We hope they will recommend more hardworking and
innovative people from their hometown to boost our business expansion."
Quanzhou Trade Union has offered the chartered flight service to migrant
workers from Sichuan Province because they were the earliest to come and have
proven to be valuable employees, said Fu Furong, the union's vice president.
"Besides the flight service, we have also chartered sleeper coaches to help
migrant workers get home during the pre-holiday travel peak," he said. "By doing
so we aim to express thanks to the migrant workers for their contribution to
Quanzhou's economic development, and to show our respect for hardworking and
talented people."
At least 1 million migrant workers are working in Quanzhou, 600,000 to
700,000 of whom are expected to join the mass migration back to their hometowns
before the Chinese New Year's eve on January 28.
"More than 20,000 trade unions at grassroots are working to facilitate their
travels by helping them get tickets for trains, ships and buses," said Fu.
Last year, the Quanzhou Trade Union chartered express trains to help some
migrant workers get home, he said.
Trains and long-distance buses are particularly crowded and tickets can be
sold out well in advance as millions of people embark en masse on the Chinese
New Year trek to hometowns or holiday destinations for the week-long break. Many
people are forced to stand up during their long journeys.
The situation worsened last week as heavy snowstorms hit central China, which
stranded more than one hundred thousand travelers.
In an effort to build a harmonious society and care for those in need, the
Chinese government is showing extra care these days for the well-being of the
migrant workers, particularly rural workers seeking their fortune in cities,
whose number is estimated at 140 million and is still growing by 3 million every
year.
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