On April 24, at the Third Experimental Primary School in Ningling County, Shangqiu, Henan, a mother staged a solo protest with a megaphone. Her action followed a month of school inaction after her child’s teeth—four in total—were knocked out by a classmate.
April 24: The protest by 5,000 workers from the Yingfeng, Huayao, and Chuangfeng plants of Hong Kong-based Wah Shing Toys in Yulin, Guangxi, has entered its fourth day. However, Wah Shing has shown no willingness to clear back pay or provide severance. At the end of 2025, when Wah Shing closed its Evergreen (Dongguan) Toy Factory, the company—with the cooperation of the CCP—evaded half of its legal obligations by paying workers only a “0.5N” settlement. It now appears the company intends to employ the same tactic. On April 20, Wah Shing shut down four of its factories in Yulin, Guangxi, leaving nearly 10,000 workers unemployed.
ransport Co., Ltd. went on strike to demand a reduction in management fees (known as “Fengzi Qian”), citing severe financial hardship. Hezhong is the largest taxi company in Fuxin.
April 21, Liushutang Village, Nanjiao Subdistrict, Suizhou, Hubei: Villagers sifted through ruins for their belongings and cash after their homes were destroyed by a CCP demolition squad. According to residents, the compensation funds for their housing have been embezzled by the village committee.
April 22, Xinji, Hebei: A woman busking on the street was handcuffed by police as if she were a criminal. The handcuffs were only removed after the move sparked public outrage among onlookers. The police claimed they were responding to a complaint, though it was only around 7 p.m. at the time.
Toy Giant Wah Shing Shutters Four Guangxi Factories in One Day; 5,000 Workers Rally for Compensation (2026.04.22–23)
On April 20, 2026 — the first workday after Guangxi’s “March Third” holiday — four Guangxi factories under Hong Kong toy manufacturing giant Wah Shing Toys simultaneously announced their closure: Rongxian Huayao Toy Manufacturing Co., Ltd., Beiliu Wah Shing Yingfeng Toy Manufacturing Co., Ltd., Beiliu Wanfeng Toys Co., Ltd., and Beiliu Chuangfeng Plastic & Electronics Co., Ltd. Nearly ten thousand workers were left jobless overnight. For two consecutive days, workers staged protests demanding full payment of owed wages and legally mandated severance, but as of the afternoon of April 22, no substantive progress had been made.
Company Statement Sidesteps Specifics
In the closure notice issued to employees, Wah Shing attributed the shutdown to the external economic environment. The company stated that escalating US-China tariff tensions in recent years had caused overseas business conditions to deteriorate sharply, with end clients withholding enormous sums in unpaid orders, ultimately causing a cash flow collapse. All business operations were to cease with immediate effect. While the notice claimed the company would “prioritize employees’ statutory rights, including wages and severance pay,” it provided no details whatsoever on compensation standards, amounts, or timelines. Workers were deeply alarmed: not long ago, Wah Shing had offered workers at another of its closed factories a payout of just 0.5N — half the legal minimum. Under China’s Labor Law, the company is required to pay at minimum the N+1 standard.
A Track Record of Shortchanging Workers
Wah Shing Toys was founded in Hong Kong in 1976 and first established factories in mainland China in 1981. Over more than four decades, it opened 11 factories across Guangdong, Guangxi, and Vietnam, with a total floor area exceeding two million square meters and a workforce of around twenty thousand, ranking among the world’s largest toy contract manufacturers. In recent years, however, as the trade environment worsened and orders continued to shrink, Wah Shing had in fact been running losses year after year. In late 2025, Changrong Toy Factory in Dongguan — a 26-year-old Wah Shing subsidiary — announced its closure after orders plummeted. At the time, the company refused to pay workers the full compensation required by law, triggering days of protests, and the dispute was ultimately settled at just half the legally mandated amount. With the Changrong case as a stark warning, Guangxi workers understood clearly: in a job market that keeps shrinking, once a factory closes, finding comparable work again is nearly impossible. Taking to the streets was the only option left — to fight for a just outcome.
Days of Protest, Authorities Step In
On the morning of April 21, around 5,000 workers from three of the four factories — all except Wanfeng Toys — launched separate protest actions. At Rongxian Huayao and Beiliu Yingfeng, workers blocked the roads outside the factories to draw public attention. Some workers at Yingfeng also climbed onto the factory rooftop and unfurled three large banners. At Beiliu Chuangfeng, workers gathered and hung banners outside the factory reading: “We gave our youth to Wah Shing — don’t go bankrupt on your conscience. Pay us what we’re owed.” In both Beiliu and Rongxian, authorities deployed police to disperse the protesters, but no clashes were reported. On the 22nd, workers continued their demonstrations. A Yulin city vice-mayor was reported to have stepped in to mediate, but as of that afternoon, the workers’ efforts had still yielded no substantive results.
As China’s economy continues its prolonged decline, factories across the country have been shutting down one after another. And those who bear the heaviest cost are always the ordinary workers on the assembly line.
On April 20, in Chang’an Town, Dongguan, Guangdong, authorities deployed a large number of Chengguan (urban management officers) to forcibly evict street vendors and confiscate their food carts. According to insiders, the crackdown is intended to clear the way for a “shell company” linked to the government to force the sale of container-style stalls. These stalls come with a 50,000-yuan entry fee and a monthly rent of 8,000 yuan. Vendors who refuse to comply are banned from operating their businesses.
“Collection of Rights Defense Incidents by Veterans (Apr 16–20, 2026)”
On April 20, in Sihui City, Guangdong, a demobilized veteran who makes a living from street vending climbed onto a law enforcement vehicle in protest after his goods were confiscated by urban management officers.
On April 17, a veteran was denied access to a restroom by a security guard in the lobby of the Hunan Provincial Department of Veterans Affairs; the guard also attempted to seize his phone.
On April 16, several veterans from Nanjing, Jiangsu, were on their way to Beijing to file petitions, but were unreasonably detained by police at the south toll station of Jianhu County, Yancheng, Jiangsu.
Also on April 16, the petition reception center of the Ministry of Veterans Affairs in Beijing was overcrowded.
Starting from May 1, 2023, China’s newly revised Regulations on Conscription Work stipulate that veterans are allowed to reenlist in the military.
April 20 — Employees of the Shanhe Hotel in Zhanjiang, Guangdong, gathered at the hotel entrance to protest with banners demanding their unpaid wages. Reportedly, the hotel has failed to pay its staff for over two years.