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VOASites by Language Log in Sign up HOMEUSAAFRICAASIAMIDEASTEUROPESCIENCE & TECHHEALTHENTERTAINMENTECONOMYPROGRAMS Listen News / Asia Myanmar Warns Workers to End Strikes Print Comment Share: Union leader Ma Moe Wai of the Tai Yi footwear factory workers speaks to her colleagues about their new wage contract. (Steve Herman/VOA News) ◀▶<>1/5Disable CaptionsLabor Unrest in Myanmar Pin It RELATED ARTICLES Myanmar, Rebels Exchange Fire, Accusations Progress Seen in Building a Healthcare System in Rural Myanmar Steve Herman February 24, 2015 1:48 AM YANGON— Myanmar’s labor ministry is warning thousands of striking factory workers that unless they return to work, authorities will take action against them.

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Union leader Ma Moe Wai of the Tai Yi footwear factory workers speaks to her colleagues about their

new wage contract. (Steve Herman/VOA News)

◀▶<▶>1/5⇱ Disable CaptionsLabor Unrest in Myanmar

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Myanmar, Rebels Exchange Fire, Accusations

Progress Seen in Building a Healthcare System in Rural Myanmar

Steve Herman

February 24, 2015 1:48 AM

YANGON—

Myanmar’s labor ministry is warning thousands of striking factory workers that unless they return to

work, authorities will take action against them.

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Outside Myanmar's main city, Yangon, industrial zones have become a focus of the country’s fledgling

workers' rights movement with thousands walking off their jobs earlier this month. They are demanding

a doubling of their wages, pay raises after a year working for the same company and input from labor

unions on industrial regulations.

Since Friday, the standoff has grown more tense as police moved in to disrupt the sit-ins, resulting in

clashes that injured people from both sides.

Labor groups say that of the 30 workers taken by authorities, the whereabouts of 20 are still not known.

They were employed at factories mainly run by Chinese companies, in joint ventures with partners

based in Myanmar, which is also known as Burma. Some of those Burmese partners are believed to have

close ties to the country’s military.

Growing Pressure to End Strikes

In an announcement broadcast on state television late Monday, the Ministry of Labor, Employment and

Social Security called the industrial actions violent and said they are hurting profits, damaging the

country's image and chasing away foreign investors.

The workers do not see it that way and those in Shwepyitha township from three companies -- E-Land

Myanmar, Ford Glory Garment and Costec International -- have dug in alongside a fetid and trash-

strewn gutter adjacent to the E-Land factory.

“The government is not on our side at all. They only protect the factory owners. No one is on our side

except for ordinary people,” contends Moh Moh Lwin, 18, a striking E-Land worker. “Even the local

authorities side with the factories. We heard that the factories bribed the local police to attack us.”

The 15 to 20 dollars a month the young woman sends home to her village in the Magway division in

central Myanmar support her parents and three younger sisters.

In these ramshackle industrial zones, factories generally employ teenaged women who earn less than

one-and-a-half dollars per day during their regular shift, although opportunities to earn overtime pay

are ample. The workers are striking for an additional base pay of about 30 dollars per month.

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The gates of the E-Land factory reopened Sunday. But E-Land General Manager Kyaw Tun Min, in a

notice posted on the front gates, declared that the company would only consider the salary demands if

the workers returned.

However, security guards said none of the workers showed up.

Neither was any representative of management on site, according to the guards. Phone calls went

unanswered to the two numbers listed on the notice signed by the general manager.

Plainclothes Police Patrol Strike Sites

The presence of a Western journalist and a Myanmar national videographer attracted the attention a

team of immigration officials who had been hanging around the strike camp, along with other

undercover officers.

Myanmar has a history of deporting labor and human rights activists. Two Spanish photographers were

deported this month after covering student protests without journalist visas, according to the Ministry

of Information.

The mood is one of resignation and relief in the nearby Hlaing Thar Yar industrial zone, where Tai Yi

footwear factory workers have agreed to accept a new monthly base pay of about 50 dollars, up from

just under 40 dollars.

They began returning to assembly lines on Tuesday.

Myanmar’s Undefined Minimum Wage

Tai Yi’s workers went on strike in 2011 when they were making just $0.70 per 12-hour shift. That was

the same year workers in Myanmar were granted the right to strike (with three days advance notice in

the private sector and 14 days advance notice in the public sector) and allowed to form labor unions.

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Myanmar's political opening has drawn strong interest from foreign investors. Ma Moe Wai, a Tai Yi

factory worker leading the strike, says they remain welcome, as long as they provide fair compensation

and rights.

“In our country factory workers earn very little and we don’t have many opportunities to find better

jobs,” she said. “Most factories pay the same because the minimum wage has not yet been set by the

government.”

Myanmar’s parliament did approve a minimum wage law two years ago. But the Labor Ministry has

been moving quite slowly towards reaching a rate, saying it still needs to conduct more research, which

in the meantime means more friction between factory owners and laborers.

Steve Herman

A veteran journalist, Steve Herman is VOA's Southeast Asia Bureau Chief and Correspondent, based in

Bangkok.

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