NOTES OF CHINESE SOCIETY
13 Immediately
after its founding in 1922-23 the Chinese Communist Party set about organizing
the railway worker. In 1922-23 strikes took place under the Party's leadership
on all the trunk lines. The best known was the general strike on the Peking-Hankow
Railway which began on February 4, 1923. It was a fight for the freedom to
organize a general trade union. On February 7 the Northern warlords Wu Pei-fu
and Hsiao Yao-nan, who were backed by British imperialism, butchered the
strikers. This became known as the February 7th Massacre.
14 The
Kailan Coal Mines was an inclusive name for the large contiguous Kaiping and
Luanchow coalfields in Hopei Province, then employing over fifty thousand
workers. During the Yi Ho Tuan Movement of 1900 the British imperialists seized
the Kaiping mines. Subsequently the Chinese organized the Luanchow Coal Mining
Company, which was later incorporated into the Kailan Mining Administration.
Both coalfields thus came under the exclusive control of British imperialism.
The Kailan strike took place in October 1922. The Tsiaotso Coal Mines, situated
in Honan Province, are also well known in China. The Tsiaotso strike lasted
from July 1 to August 9, 1925
15 Shameen,
a section of the city of Canton, was held on lease by British imperialism. In
July 1924 the British imperialists who ruled it issued a new police regulation
requiring all Chinese to produce passes with photos on leaving or entering the
area. But foreigners were exempt. On July 15 the workers in Shameen went on
strike to protest against this preposterous measure, which the British
imperialists were finally forced to cancel.
16 Following
the May 30th Incident in Shanghai, general strikes broke out on June 1, 1925 in
Shanghai and on June 19 in Hong Kong. More than 200,000 workers took part in
Shanghai and 250,000 in Hong Kong. The big Hong Kong strike, with the support
of the people throughout the country, lasted sixteen months. It was the longest
strike in the history of the world labour movement.
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