Myanmar: Workplace Coordination Committees formed since the coup in garment factories allegedly operate in collusion with employers to 'oppress' workers
Özet
Date Reported: 30 Ara 2022
Lokasyon: Myanmar
Şirketler
Pimkie (part of Association Familiale Mulliez) - Buyer , Lidl - Former buyer , Auchan - Buyer , Carrefour - Former buyer , Primark (part of Associated British Foods) - Former buyer , Myanmar Guotai Huasheng Glory Fashion - Supplier , Tendam - BuyerEtkilenenler
Total individuals affected: 700
İşçiler: ( 700 - Lokasyon bilinmiyor , Giyim ve tekstil , Gender not reported )Meseleler
Örgütlenme özgürlüğü , Harassment (other than sexual) , Cinsiyet ayrımcılığı , Denial of leaveYanıt
Response sought: Yes, by BHRRC
Story containing response: (Find out more)
Action taken: Guotai Huasheng Glory Fashion allegedly supplies or has supplied to Primark, Auchan, Carrefour, Lidl and Pimkie; Primark and Auchan provided a response to an invite to comment from the Resource Centre. Pimkie did not respond. Carrefour and Lidl previously informed the Resource Centre that they no longer source from the factory. In January 2024, Primark informed us it had completed its responsible exit in October 2023 and no longer sources from the factory. In September 2024, Tendam did not provide a response to an invite to comment from the Resource Centre.
Source type: News outlet
Özet
Date Reported: 30 Ara 2022
Lokasyon: Myanmar
Şirketler
Saung Oo Shwe Nay (Golden Sunshine) - Supplier , Hennes & Mauritz (H&M) - Former buyer , New Yorker - BuyerEtkilenenler
Total individuals affected: 1
İşçiler: ( Sayı bilinmiyor - Lokasyon bilinmiyor , Giyim ve tekstil , Gender not reported )Meseleler
Örgütlenme özgürlüğü , Dayak ve şiddetYanıt
Response sought: Yes, by BHRRC
Story containing response: (Find out more)
Action taken: Saung Oo Shwe Nay (Golden Sunshine) allegedly supplies to H&M; H&M provided a response to a request for comment from the Resource Centre. In September 2024 H&M stated it no longer sources from the factory, and New Yorker did not provide a response to a request for comment from the Resource Centre.
Source type: News outlet
"After the military coup, the factory WCC groups have been formed to take the side of entrepreneurs if there is a dispute in the workshops", 30 December 2022
According to the workers, since the coup… the Workplace Coordination Committee (WCC), which has been formed more and more, has been formed according to the preferences of the businessmen, and in the process of disputes within the factory, they only stand on the side of the employer in almost every factory.
“WCCs are usually people from the employer's side. The super[visors and] clerks at the factory. If there is a problem in the factory, the worker tells the WCC. WCC tells the employer; If the employer does not accept it, the WCC will not accept it…Their solutions to the grievances of the workers are not good and they are not on the side of the workers…This is almost every factory," said one of the local workers...
...in practice, the WCC is formed at will by the employer, and the WCC operates at the will of the employer, and oppressed workers say that they are oppressing the workers.
"...This is what the employers have established to show their brand, and the Ministry of Labor also asked them to form the WCC...the Ministry of Labor is working on labor issues under the Military Council, and employers also show their brands…to get their orders," he said.
There are such phenomena in industrial zone businesses in Yangon Region, and the WCC (Labor Affairs Coordinating Committee) and the employers' representative managers, super[visors], clerks, etc., who are often involved in the WCC, are forced to call workers [to work] overtime. In addition to asking for exorbitant records [they are] being forced to swear, physical beatings are [also] reported to be taking place in the workplace.
Since last October, at the Saung Oo Shwe Nay Garment Factory in Hlaing Thayar Township, Yangon Province, where...H&M has been sewing, the manager [and] super[visors]…have been swearing rudely at the workers every day. In addition to scolding, the former super[visor] from line number (28) physically beat the worker until the worker's shirt was ripped off, so the worker who was beaten went to the WCC established by the employer to complain, but there was no solution.
In addition, [in] Yangon Region, Hlaing Tharay Township Industrial Zone (2), [m]ore than 700 workers are working at Myanmar Guotai Huasheng Glory Fashion Garment, which opened on U Ton Nyo Road and sews [for] the PRIMARK brand. WCC representatives and employers oppressed the workers in the workplace, [with] shouting from super[visors]. Last September, I made a request because I was facing difficulties in getting benefits under the labor law, such as casual leave and medical leave.
[Translation via Google Translate]