NEW YORK – Thousands of workers at the Ciyu Shoe Factory in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen have been on strike from March 10 to March 12 over suddenly reduced wages, and based on worker interviews conducted today by China Labor Watch (CLW), they will continue their action until workers receive economic compensation.
According to workers, until recently the Ciyu Shoe Factory manufactured products for New Balance. But after a production shift to Crocs shoes, workers’ monthly wages suddenly dropped from about 4,000 RMB ($650) to 2,000 RMB ($325). Workers are not sure exactly what caused the sudden reduction in wages, but they suspect it may be a way to force more workers to resign.
More than 2,000 workers have been at Ciyu for at least five years, and more than 1,000 have been working at the company for more than 10 years.
On Monday, March 10, about 6,000 workers began striking for economic compensation. The worker representatives were arrested, and the angered workers continued the strike on March 11, on which more strike leaders were arrested. Only when workers reacted intensely to these arrests did officials set the representatives free.
Workers protest in front of the Longgang District Government
On March 12, workers marched together to the Shenzhen Longgang District Government carrying a yellow banner that spelled out their demands. Once they reached the District Government, the workers sat in protest. About 100 public security personnel were dispatched to the site, where they blocked, filmed, and hit workers.
Workers told CLW that they did not want to select any more worker representatives to carry out negotiations because they feared they would be arrested, just as strike leaders had been arrested on the previous two days.
While protesting in front of the District Government, it began raining and workers opened umbrellas. Security personnel yelled at workers to get on government-provided buses to return to the factory, but the protestors refused to use the buses. Despite security personnel telling them over and over to get on the buses, the workers eventually marched themselves back to the factory, a walk of more than one hour.
Workers told CLW that if the company or government does not meet workers’ demands, then the action would continue.