Employment and Labour on human trafficking and child labour trial by Chinese accused to resume next year

Stop-start Chinese trial on human trafficking and child labour to resume next year after a Mandarin interpreter finally turns out
The stop-start trial of seven Chinese nationals appearing in the Johannesburg High Court for alleged human trafficking and child labour is set to begin next March after the Mandarin interpreter finally made it to Court.
The seven Chinese accused in the matter are: Kevin Tsao Shu-Uei, Chen Hui, Qin Li, Jiaqing Zhou, Ma Biao, Dai Junying, and Zhang Zhilian. The accused are facing schedule six offenses. The previous interpreter had to withdraw because the accused complained because they did not understand the Chinese dialect he was speaking.
They are accused of human trafficking, contravention of Immigration Act, kidnapping, pointing a firearm, debt bondage, benefitting from the services of a victim of trafficking, conduct that facilitates trafficking, illegally assisting person(s) to remain in South Africa, and failure to comply with duties of an employer.
In October (2021) the accused pleaded guilty to violating several of South Africa’s labour laws. These relate to Occupational Health and Safety the Unemployment Insurance Fund (UIF) Act, UI Contributions Act, the National Minimum Wage Act, Compensation for Occupational Injuries and Diseases Act (COIDA).
However, the other charges still stand and they will continue to face trial on those.
Five of the accused are out on bail. The other two accused Chen Hui (number 2) and Zhang Zhilian (number 7) are now in custody for violating their bail conditions. The two tried on separate occasions to flee the country and were nabbed.
The accused were arrested in 2019 for allegedly running an illegal enterprise called Beautiful City Pty Ltd located at Village Deep in Johannesburg in a joint operation by the Department of Employment and Labour’s Inspection and Enforcement Services (IES) branch together with the South African Police Service (SAPS) Hawk Unit and the Department of Home Affairs.
The Chinese factory is alleged to have been employing 91 illegal Malawian nationals, 37 of them were children. The Court has since heard that most of the Malawians working in the factory were transported to South Africa through containers.
The Malawian workers employed at the factory testified that the company’s operations were carried out behind closed high steel gates with access strictly controlled. Workers were also allegedly subjected to beatings, insults and exposed to hazardous working conditions in violation of occupational health and safety Act.
The matter has been remanded to 27 March 2023. The accused have been warned to respect their bails conditions.

Source: Government of South Africa

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