Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from USA, Canada and Europe directly to your inbox.

    What's Hot

    ‘Boy Meets World’s Maitland Ward Backing Ben Savage’s Run for Congress

    January 28, 2023

    ‘Back to being civil’: Coutts residents continue to heal one year after border blockade

    January 28, 2023

    Sprinting great Usain Bolt says ‘stressful situation’ trying to recover lost millions | CNN

    January 28, 2023
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms
    • Contact
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    West ObserverWest Observer
    • Home
    • News
      1. United States
      2. Europe
      3. Canada
      4. Latin America
      5. Australia
      6. World
      7. View All

      UK: Russia Likely Undercounts New Year’s Day Strike Casualties

      January 28, 2023

      Radioactive Capsule Lost in Australia

      January 28, 2023

      UN Weekly Roundup: Jan. 21-27, 2023

      January 28, 2023

      Women Who Lived as Sex Slaves to Indian Goddess

      January 28, 2023

      Stop “torturing, disappearing and murdering”, the commitment for peace of criminal groups in Medellín, according to the government

      January 28, 2023

      Neither Jewish, nor with two university degrees, nor the son of a survivor of the Twin Towers: lies corner Republican George Santos

      January 28, 2023

      Aggressor immobilized during flight and handed over to PSP upon landing in Lisbon

      January 28, 2023

      DIRECT. Israel: 13-year-old Palestinian identified as perpetrator of attack that left two injured, the day after the shooting near a synagogue

      January 28, 2023

      ‘Back to being civil’: Coutts residents continue to heal one year after border blockade

      January 28, 2023

      ‘This is too much’: B.C. mom records police handcuffing 12-year-old in hospital

      January 28, 2023

      Canadian Hyundai vehicles unaffected by theft issue in the U.S., company says

      January 28, 2023

      Organ donations and transplants in Canada increased between 2020 and 2021: report

      January 28, 2023

      Raffle this Saturday (28) with an estimated prize of R$ 75 million

      January 28, 2023

      What do I know and how do the Leopard 2 tanks work and why are they important to Ukraine?

      January 28, 2023

      20 delicacies for you to experience

      January 28, 2023

      I knew how to proceed with medicines on international trips

      January 28, 2023

      Amal Al-Dabbas: The embodiment of the suffering of cancer patients from my dreams

      January 28, 2023

      Asaad Rashdan to Asharq Al-Awsat: The Lebanese actor at my age is suffering

      January 28, 2023

      Yousra El-Lawzy: I bet on the difference between “Al-Maddah” and “Jamila” in Ramadan

      January 28, 2023

      Iraq is approaching the Arabs…and maneuvering with Tehran and Washington

      January 28, 2023

      ‘Back to being civil’: Coutts residents continue to heal one year after border blockade

      January 28, 2023

      UK: Russia Likely Undercounts New Year’s Day Strike Casualties

      January 28, 2023

      Stop “torturing, disappearing and murdering”, the commitment for peace of criminal groups in Medellín, according to the government

      January 28, 2023

      Raffle this Saturday (28) with an estimated prize of R$ 75 million

      January 28, 2023
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Lifestyle
    • Tech
    • Sports
    • Travel
    • More
      • Entertainment
      • Videos
    en English
    en Englishes Españolfr Françaisde Deutschhi हिन्दीit Italianoja 日本語pt Portuguêsru Русскийzh-CN 简体中文
    West ObserverWest Observer
    Home » Chinese migrant workers face crackdown for ‘malicious’ protests over unpaid wages

    Chinese migrant workers face crackdown for ‘malicious’ protests over unpaid wages

    January 25, 2023No Comments Business
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Chinese migrant workers demanding overdue wages from their employers are facing a crackdown by local governments over alleged “malicious” labour activism.

    More than a dozen cities across China have in recent weeks threatened to punish workers who take “extremist” measures, such as protests blocking traffic or outside government offices, to get the money they are owed.

    The campaign follows widespread reports of payment delays by employers including debt-laden real estate developers and Covid-19 testing providers that have had trouble collecting receivables from cash-strapped local governments. The problem is exacerbated by poor enforcement of labour laws, making it difficult for workers to seek redress through legal channels.

    The pay disputes broke out into confrontation ahead of this week’s lunar new year holiday, typically the world’s biggest annual human migration, when many urban residents return to their families in rural hometowns, often for the only time all year.

    That makes pre-holiday paydays especially important for migrant workers, many of whom have been prevented from travelling home for the past three years by Beijing’s strict zero-Covid controls, which were only abandoned last month.

    According to labour lawyers, the campaign to suppress worker unrest reflects local governments’ determination to support employers, their biggest sources of fiscal revenues, as they attempt to revive growth in the world’s second-largest economy. China’s gross domestic product expanded just 3 per cent in 2022, missing a 5.5 per cent target that was already the lowest in decades as Covid restrictions stifled activity.

    “Local governments won’t be able to support themselves until business owners are able to support themselves,” said Zhou Litai, a labour lawyer based in Chongqing, south-west China.

    Property developers and Covid-19 testing providers have faced particular trouble meeting payrolls. Real estate groups have been squeezed by a rolling liquidity crisis that has stalled projects and triggered defaults across the sector, while Beijing’s Covid mass testing programme, which required much of the population to undergo swabs every few days, emptied local government coffers, leaving them unable to pay their bills.

    Protests have erupted across the country as desperate workers resorted to more radical steps to claim missing wages. Hundreds of labourers clashed this month with local police in Chongqing after their employer, a Covid test kit maker, forced them to take unpaid leave.

    “We have tried every peaceful means to resolve the issue and it didn’t work,” said a worker at the Chongqing plant who joined the protest and asked not to be identified.

    Such incidents have stoked the Chinese Communist party’s perennial fear of social turmoil spiralling out of control and challenging its grip on power. While most cities have pledged to protect labour rights, they have also imposed strict limits on what workers can do to chase unpaid wages.

    In Huidong county, Guangdong province, the local government’s human resources and social security bureau said this month that workers could face criminal charges for severely criticising government officials or even threatening self-harm when seeking overdue payments.

    “Individuals must seek payments through appropriate means,” said the agency in a statement. “[Malicious methods] are strictly prohibited.”

    Police in Linyi county in eastern Shandong province detained five workers just for reporting payment delays to city and provincial government departments. “Filing complaints to the upper-level government agencies is absolutely unacceptable,” Linyi police said in a statement. “It will disrupt social order.”

    But some workers remain undeterred. In Zhengzhou, in central Henan province, a construction worker who said they were owed three months’ wages camped out in the project’s showroom, refusing to leave and sleeping there overnight.

    “The police said they could arrest me for doing so,” Shen, the worker, who asked to only be identified by a surname, told the Financial Times. “I don’t mind spending a few days behind bars where I can get free food and shelter.”

    Additional reporting by Xinning Liu in Beijing

    Source: Financial Times

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email VKontakte WhatsApp

    Related Posts

    How (not) to fund the arts

    January 28, 2023

    Rollout of overseas power link leaves UK reliant on neighbours for energy

    January 28, 2023

    Tom Nairn, political theorist, 1932-2023

    January 28, 2023

    Football’s multi-club owners start to feel growing pains

    January 28, 2023

    Dell looks to phase out ‘made in China’ chips by 2024

    January 28, 2023

    Top US air force general predicts China conflict in 2025

    January 28, 2023
    Don't Miss

    Sprinting great Usain Bolt says ‘stressful situation’ trying to recover lost millions | CNN

    Politics January 28, 2023

    Reuters  —  World 100 and 200 meters record holder Usain Bolt said on Friday that…

    Brighton tell midfielder Caicedo to take time off

    January 28, 2023

    UK: Russia Likely Undercounts New Year’s Day Strike Casualties

    January 28, 2023

    Stop “torturing, disappearing and murdering”, the commitment for peace of criminal groups in Medellín, according to the government

    January 28, 2023
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Our Picks

    Raffle this Saturday (28) with an estimated prize of R$ 75 million

    January 28, 2023

    Neither Jewish, nor with two university degrees, nor the son of a survivor of the Twin Towers: lies corner Republican George Santos

    January 28, 2023

    Aggressor immobilized during flight and handed over to PSP upon landing in Lisbon

    January 28, 2023

    DIRECT. Israel: 13-year-old Palestinian identified as perpetrator of attack that left two injured, the day after the shooting near a synagogue

    January 28, 2023

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from USA, Canada and Europe directly to your inbox.

    About Us
    About Us

    Your #1 source for all the website news, follow USA, Europe and Canada News. Latest reports about business, politics and entertainment.

    We're accepting new partnerships right now.

    Email Us: [email protected]

    Facebook Twitter YouTube LinkedIn
    Our Picks

    ‘Boy Meets World’s Maitland Ward Backing Ben Savage’s Run for Congress

    January 28, 2023

    ‘Back to being civil’: Coutts residents continue to heal one year after border blockade

    January 28, 2023

    Sprinting great Usain Bolt says ‘stressful situation’ trying to recover lost millions | CNN

    January 28, 2023
    Newsletter

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from USA, Canada and Europe directly to your inbox.

    © 2023 West Observer. All Rights Reserved.
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms
    • Contact

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.