.contact us |.about us
News > National News...
Search:
    Advertisement
Sectors scrutinized in wage wrangle
( 2003-12-15 08:56) (China Daily)

Local governments in China have launched a special inspection of the country's building, services, catering and manufacturing industries in a bid to ensure that millions of migrant workers get their overdue wages before they go home to celebrate the lunar New Year.

The Beijing municipal construction committee has ordered all construction companies in the city to pay migrant workers their 2003 defaulted salaries before Spring Festival, or the traditional Chinese New Year, which falls on January 22.

"The wages must be paid 100 per cent by January 15, otherwise I, as representative of all 850,000 migrant workers in Beijing, will not give up fighting," said Liu Yongfu, director of the construction committee.

In Sichuan Province, more than 300 telephone calls from migrant workers complaining about their employers having defaulted payments have been answered since a hotline was opened on December 1, according to the provincial Labour and Social Security Bureau.

The Henan provincial government has announced its step-by-step plan, stating that no more new debts should be created from January 1 next year, while 50 per cent of former debts should be paid by the end of next year. It said all debts must be cleared out by 2006.

Migrant workers from all over the country are often used in construction projects, with the promise of payment by the end of the year. But it has been a common practice for the promises to go unfulfilled or to only be partially honoured.

In Beijing, for example, about 3 billion yuan for such cases is still unpaid, as a result of delayed payment to the construction contractors, accounting for 20 per cent of the total payment.

Eleven enterprises which failed to pay for construction projects to the contractors were exposed to the public and punished, the municipal construction committee announced on Friday.

These enterprises will not be granted licences for new projects, and their negative records will be exposed to the banks.

In Beijing, 1.26 billion yuan (US$153 million) has been transferred directly to those long-waiting hands over the weekend, according to local source.

"I finally retrieved my payment, which was four months in arrears," said Tian Shirong in a trembling voice while holding his defaulted payment - 2,000 yuan (US$241).

"I can securely spend my new year at home now," said Tian, 29, who hails from Central China's Hubei Province and had been working for a construction company in Beijing's Xuanwu District.

According to statistics from the All-China Federation of Trade Unions, China has 94 million migrant rural laborers, whose employers are in arrears up to 100 billion yuan (US$12 billion).

Over 70 per cent of payment default comes from construction enterprises, and the next biggest defaulter is catering companies.

 
Close  
   
  Today's Top News   Top National News
   
+Saddam detained; Bush says attacks not over
( 2003-12-15)
+Saddam 'caught like a rat' in a hole
( 2003-12-15)
+Dramatic increase of energy consumption predicted
( 2003-12-15)
+Comment on HK by US consul criticized
( 2003-12-15)
+Leaders push partnership
( 2003-12-15)
+Sectors scrutinized in wage wrangle
( 2003-12-15)
+Dramatic increase of energy consumption predicted
( 2003-12-15)
+Comment on HK by US consul criticized
( 2003-12-15)
+Leaders push partnership
( 2003-12-15)
+Rescue operations halted at fire-hit northwest China colliery
( 2003-12-14)
   
  Go to Another Section  
     
 
 
     
  Article Tools  
     
   
     
  Related Articles  
     
 

+Relief for migrant laborers
2003-12-06

+Helping migrants belong in cities
2003-11-28

+Migrant pay action pledged
2003-11-25

+A migrant worker's struggle for subsistence for 115 days
2003-11-12

+Sunnier city life for rural children
2003-11-06

+They dream of building better life for their kids
2003-10-23

+Safeguards needed for migrant workers
2003-10-21

 
     
   
        .contact us |.about us
  Copyright By chinadaily.com.cn. All rights reserved