Street vendor Ma Yonghui, top and Li Gaopan, above, an urban
management official swap roles on June 8 in an effort to understand each others'
daily working conditions. [Photo]
An urban management official, or chengguan, has one of the least rewarding
jobs in China. The municipal employees are tasked with enforcing city rules such
as bans on hawking or begging.
Frequent incidents of "excessive" and arbitrary violence against often
poverty-stricken street vendors and migrant workers have given chengguan an image as heartless,
corrupt enforcers.
In a move to strengthen mutual understanding, a chengguan and a hawker in Luoyang city of Henan province
swapped roles for a day on June 8, Henan-based Dahe Daily reported.
At 10 pm on Sunday, when his day's work finished, fruit vendor Ma Yonghui was
exhausted.
He was annoyed that some vendors kept returning to the same spots, usually
busy traffic intersections, after he had ordered them to leave. He said it
saddened him when hawkers showed distain toward him, worse even than ridiculing
him.
Ma came up with some tips for chengguan after the day's work, saying never interrupt a
vendor with customers who could be put off, and never try to collect the tools
of the vendor's trade. Letting them do the packing up is a good way to avoid
potential violence.
While Li Gaopan, a chengguan
who played the vendor, said he now recognized the need to sell fruit as quickly
as possible as it soon went off. The neighborhood he was at has no supermarkets
or traditional market, but residents still have the demand for fruit and the
vendor's service is needed.