~ Le Viêt Nam, aujourd'hui. ~
The Vietnam News

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10,000 workers on strike in Vietnam toy factory

HANOI - - Nearly 10,000 workers went on strike at a Hong Kong-owned Vietnam toy factory, the latest in a rash of labour disputes amid double-digit inflation ahead of the Tet lunar New Year, state media said.

The workers at the Keyhinge Toy plant in the central city of Danang walked off the job Wednesday, demanding higher bonuses and longer holidays for Tet, the country's most important festival next week, one of the workers told AFP. "Many of us live very far away, as far north as Thai Nguyen province," another worker reportedly told the Lao Dong (Labour) newspaper. "With this low bonus and short holiday, we can't even manage to go home for Tet."

The plant run by the Keyhinge Industrial Company was criticised in the late 1990s by international labour rights activists who charged its factory, then making Disney promotional toys for McDonalds, exploited workers. The industrial action there this week was one of several strikes in foreign-owned plants in Vietnam, a low-wage economy of 86 million and also a major exporter of textiles, footwear, electronics and food products.

Also Wednesday thousands of labourers downed tools at a Hyundai-Vinashin shipbuilding plant in southern Khanh Hoa province and a Vietnamese seafood plant in Hau Giang province, the Tien Phong (Pioneer) daily reported. The recent spate of industrial disputes has hit mostly foreign owned factories in the main industrial region around southern Ho Chi Minh City. Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has issued a directive that groups and individuals who strike must compensate their employers if a court later finds they violated Vietnamese labour laws, the official government website said.

Vietnam on January 1 raised the monthly minimum wage for labourers to 540,000 dong (about 34 dollars) and at least 800,000 dong for workers in foreign-invested enterprises, the state-run Vietnam News Agency reported. But workers have complained the wage rise has not kept pace with spiralling food, fuel and other consumer prices that have hit the poor the hardest. The government-run General Statistics Office this week estimated that consumer prices rose by over 14 percent in January from a year earlier.

Vietnam bans labour unions that are independent of the ruling Communist Party, and industrial relations experts say that most workplaces currently lack transparent arbitration mechanisms to settle labour disputes. Last month Vietnam jailed the founders of the banned United Workers-Farmers Organization, which demands the right to form independent labour unions, for "abusing democracy and freedoms to infringe on the interests of the state."

Agence France Presse - February 1, 2008.