Hundreds of Chinese factory workers angry about strictly timed bathroom
breaks and fines for starting work late held their Japanese and Chinese
managers hostage for a day and a half before police broke up the strike.
About 1,000 workers at Shanghai Shinmei Electric Company held the 10
Japanese nationals and eight Chinese managers inside the factory in
Shanghai starting Friday morning until 11.50 p.m. Saturday, said a
statement from the parent company, Shinmei Electric Co., released
Monday. It said the managers were released uninjured after 300 police
officers were called to the factory.
A security guard at the Shanghai plant said Tuesday that workers had
gone on strike to protest the company's issuing of new work rules,
including time limits on bathroom breaks and fines for being late.
"The workers demanded the scrapping of the ridiculously strict
requirements stipulating that workers only have two minutes to go to the
toilet and workers will be fined 50 yuan ($8) if they are late once and
fired if they are late twice," said the security guard, surnamed Feng.
"The managers were later freed when police intervened and when they
agreed to reconsider the rules."
The plant makes electromagnetic coils and other electronic products. It
was closed Tuesday, said a man who answered at the plant but refused to
identify himself. He said no workers were on strike and staff would
return to work on Wednesday.
Strikes have become commonplace in China, as factories operating in
highly competitive markets try to get more productivity from their labor
force and workers connected by mobile phones and the Internet become
more aware of their rights.
Shinmei Electric's statement didn't say specifically what the workers
were protesting, but said management reforms and labor policies were
believed to be a cause. It said talks were under way with workers at the
plant and that police were questioning staff.
A man who refused to give his name from the press office of the Shanghai
police bureau said he had no information about the incident and
referred calls to the Shanghai government press office, where calls rang
unanswered.
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