'Chinese firms exploiting workers overseas, multiple reports of violations pour in'
Dec 04, 2021
Beijing [China], December 4 : Chinese companies are exploiting workers overseas with multiple reports of violations pouring in from areas including Laos, where workers who were hired for construction projects, undertaken six years ago are still waiting for their payments.
In its report, The HK Post said that workers in Laos have claimed that they are yet to receive any payment for the work done in 2015. These workers were hired by a Chinese company to build homes for villagers displaced by the construction of a China-backed dam.
This is not the only case of Laos workers being exploited by Chinese companies. Just weeks before China's bullet train project in Laos was to be thrown open for the public, over a hundred workers who built this high-speed railway, which connects China with Laos, say they have not been paid for two months, The HK Post reported.
Disputes between Chinese companies and their hired local workers have become a constant theme in such China-backed projects, said the report.
The companies claim many workers are not serious, often don't finish the assigned tasks and as such cannot be paid until all the work is completed. "They don't work hard. Some fall asleep on the job, some others are high on meth, and some steal. The employers cut off their wages and sometimes call the police on them," a Lao supervisor working for a Chinese subcontractor said, reported The HK Post.
"The workers, on the other hand, claim that they were promised pay at the end of each month and many have run out of money to buy even food. Meanwhile, a labour law expert said the workers will have to continue their fight for payment and legally have the option of suing these Chinese companies in court," the report said.
The HK Post further reported that similar reports have been coming in from other parts of the world where China is a major investor, for example, Serbia. The first Chinese car tire factory in Europe, Shandong Linglong Tire Co., is based in this harsh, cold desert, and Vietnamese workers have been hired to set up this huge facility.
Many human rights groups in Serbia have warned that the company may be involved in heinous crimes like human trafficking and slavery, said the report.
According to The HK Post, Serbian activist Miso Zivanov earlier told the media, "Vietnamese (workers) are working in terrible conditions. Their passports and identification documents have been taken by their Chinese employers. They have been here since May, and have received only one salary. They are trying to get back to Vietnam but first need to get back their documents."