Myanmar: Day labourers at alleged Terranova & Sinsay supplier reportedly fired & rehired to avoid payments & benefits
摘要
日期: 2023年10月5日
地点: 缅甸
企业
LPP Spółka Akcyjna - Reported buyer , Sen Yu/Zhejian Newway (Myanmar) - Supplier , Terranova - Buyer , Sinsay (part of LPP S.A.) - Reported buyer , New Yorker - Buyer , LC Waikiki - Former buyer受影响的
受影响的总人数: 1000
工人: ( 1000 - 地点未知 , 衣服和纺织品 , Gender not reported )议题
Denial of permanent contracts , 监视 , Wage Theft , Dismissal , Mandatory overtime , Occupational Health & Safety回应
已邀请回应:是,由BHRRC
载有回应的故事: (查看更多)
后续行动: Sen Yu allegedly supplies to LPP S.A (for its Sinsay brand) and Terranova, LPP S.A provided a response to a request for comment by the Resource Centre, stating that it does not source from the factory. Terranova did not respond. In September 2024, LC Waikiki provided a response to a request for comment by the Resource Centre, stating that its last orders were completed between May-July 2024. New Yorker did not respond.
信息来源: News outlet
"At...international brand factory, day laborers were forced to work for about 3 months. He gave a [warning] to the worker who pointed out that he had to work without a day off", 5 October 2023
...The SEN YU garment factory, which manufactures jackets [for] international brands such as TERRANOVA [and Sinsay], has only been open for about 5 months. Currently, more than 100 day laborers are forced to work for about 3 months, then fired, and then rehired as day laborers, so the workers say that they are losing their rights.
The factory, which operates with more than 1,000 workers, is...opened on Van Maw Secretary Road in the middle of the village of Hlaing Thayar Township.
In addition to the violation of day laborers, some of the confirmed employees were also fired.
According to the labor law...workers who have worked for 6 months do not have to [b paid] severance pay...
The manager, Daw Si Sime...does not support workers. The workers said that [he was] known to act...on the side of the employer without acting according to the law.
"Some workers are fired because they don't have orders, and then they call in new people, violating the law outright," the worker noted.
In the current workplace, it is known that they do not leave the office for overtime, and they work from 7:55 a.m. to 6:30 a.m. every weekday to 4:30 a.m. on Sundays, and the rest of the days they have to work until 8:30 p.m. without a break.
"On September 28th, there are workers who were forced to stop working because they didn't get orders. The next day, I asked the manager, and he said that they were fired because they didn't listen to the super[visors]" said the worker, who did not want to be named.
It is reported that workers who refuse to [work overtime] are forced to sign [for their resignation] on the grounds that they are no longer needed.
[Workers also report] [i]nadequate [transport] for workers...meeting[s] during breaks...Installing cctv in the boys' toilets...
[Translation via Google Translate]