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Strike by China bus drivers tests Singapore's patience

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Strike by China bus drivers tests Singapore's patience


SINGAPORE (Reuters) - This week's walkout in Singapore by dozens of mainland Chinese bus drivers over disparities in pay would have been considered small, calm and short-lived in almost any other nation.

But the strike, in breach of the law and mostly over by Wednesday, was the first significant industrial action in the tightly regulated Asian financial centre in more than 25 years.

For the first two days of this week, buses ran late and crowded in a city that prides itself on efficiency, leading to complaints from customers.

"This is Singapore NOT China. If you cannot follow the law of the land please go back to your own country and strike," Today newspaper reader Leonard Low wrote on the paper's website.

After a tough election last year, the strike highlights challenges for the long-ruling government of the majority ethnic Chinese island as it tries to defuse anger over an influx of immigrants while discouraging labor unrest that could hurt investment.

The action by the drivers from China, over complaints they are paid less than Singaporean and Malaysian peers, also underlines the treatment of lower-skilled foreign workers who are vital to the construction, hospitality and transport sectors in the wealthy city-state.

"There's a danger in becoming too emotional about it," said Bank of America Merrill Lynch economist Chua Hak Bin. "Not many Singaporeans want to work as bus drivers at this kind of wage levels. You need foreign workers to fill the gap."

Chua said companies would have to get used to higher wage demands by lower-skilled foreign workers, given the much larger salary increases in countries such as China.

In the case of SMRT Corp Ltd, one of two bus companies that ply Singapore's roads, Chinese nationals account for about 450 of the 2,000 or so drivers on its payroll.

Kit Wei Zheng, an economist at Citigroup, said more labor disputes could emerge given developments in the region.

"Globally and regionally, there is greater labor activism taking place," he said. "In China, you have seen more assertive industrial action so, in hindsight, it was not surprising that some of these pressures reached Singapore's shores."

As a global financial centre with the world's highest concentration of millionaires, Singapore is awash with flashy cars, pricey shops and fancy restaurants that epitomize the wealth of foreign and domestic businesspeople and bankers.

But much of the vitriol against immigrants - about stealing jobs, pushing up housing costs and crowding public transport - is directed at the most visible, those who do the tough and dirty work and are among the lowest paid.

"These (Chinese) drivers don't deserve the same salary and benefits," Singapore resident Bao Heng wrote on Acting Manpower Minister Tan Chuan Jin's Facebook page. "Many Singaporeans would agree with me that Malaysians drivers are safer drivers."

While comments in newspapers and Internet postings suggest many Singaporeans favor a hard line against the striking bus drivers, support for them was high in their native China.

"Come back brothers, plenty of opportunities back home," one person wrote on the Chinese microblogging site Sina Weibo.

"Should go on strike. This is a form of discrimination. Should be equal pay for equal work," said another posting.

ZERO TOLERANCE

Singapore, which saw its last major industrial action in 1986 at a U.S. oilfield equipment firm, has no minimum wage and prohibits workers in public transport and other essential services from going on strike without giving notice of 14 days.

In taking action that Tan, the acting manpower minister, said "clearly crossed the line", 171 Chinese drivers did not show up for work on Monday and 88 did not report on Tuesday.

Most of them returned to duty on Wednesday after officials from the Chinese embassy spoke with them late on Tuesday.

Tan said his ministry expected SMRT, controlled by powerful state investor Temasek Holdings Pte Ltd, to address the grievances but that the government had "zero tolerance for such unlawful action".

The National Trades Union Congress, which does not represent the Chinese drivers, said "any action that is illegal must and will be dealt with firmly, regardless of whether the workers are local or foreign".

The drivers complain SMRT switched them to a six-day week with slightly higher pay from a five-day week that had allowed them to earn more by doing overtime.

One driver told the Lianhe Wanbao newspaper he now was paid S$1,400 ($1,100) a month, lower than the S$2,000 he used to be able to make with overtime on days off. The Chinese are also angry about getting less than Singaporean and Malaysian drivers.

Bus drivers, whether Chinese or Singaporean, are not highly paid in a country where the 2011 median monthly salary was about S$3,250 for citizens and permanent residents. Foreign maids and nannies - most of them from Indonesia, the Philippines and Myanmar - do even worse, getting as little as S$500 a month.

SMRT, which calls its drivers "service leaders" (SLs), said it lodged a police report over possible breaches of the law and urged the Chinese workers to use proper channels for complaints.

Strike by China bus drivers tests Singapore's patience - Yahoo! Singapore Finance
 
That's interesting. Although, i wonder where these people learned how to conduct a strike. :lol:
 
please stop posting threads which serve no purpose other than to create another round of trolling and hostility.
 
4 Chinese drivers charged over Singapore bus strike


SINGAPORE--Four mainland Chinese bus drivers were charged in Singapore on Thursday with inciting a strike by dozens of drivers that highlighted tension about an influx of immigrants and the treatment of foreign workers in the wealthy financial center.

They were formally charged on Thursday, media reported, saying court documents showed the alleged ringleader incited his colleagues in an online message titled “The insults and humiliation suffered by Singapore drivers.”

If convicted, the men face a maximum fine of SG$2,000 (US$1,600) and/or a sentence of up to a year in prison.

In a statement, China's Commerce Ministry said it is “paying very close attention to this labor dispute.”

4 Chinese drivers charged over Singapore bus strike - The China Post


Every country has its own labor laws and the leaders have been arrested and charged. All the drivers are back to work, I'm sure their future wages will be on the management's agenda. No problems, lets move on.
 
4 Chinese drivers charged over Singapore bus strike


SINGAPORE--Four mainland Chinese bus drivers were charged in Singapore on Thursday with inciting a strike by dozens of drivers that highlighted tension about an influx of immigrants and the treatment of foreign workers in the wealthy financial center.

They were formally charged on Thursday, media reported, saying court documents showed the alleged ringleader incited his colleagues in an online message titled “The insults and humiliation suffered by Singapore drivers.”

If convicted, the men face a maximum fine of SG$2,000 (US$1,600) and/or a sentence of up to a year in prison.

In a statement, China's Commerce Ministry said it is “paying very close attention to this labor dispute.”

4 Chinese drivers charged over Singapore bus strike - The China Post


Every country has its own labor laws and the leaders have been arrested and charged. All the drivers are back to work, I'm sure their future wages will be on the management's agenda. No problems, lets move on.

Appreciate that you didn't defend the wrong doers, this time.

There doesn't seem to be a wage difference: Chinese drivers about being paid $1075 + $275 accommodation (=$1350) per month. Others are being paid $1400 in cash, no accommdation. And as per Singapore laws, it's legal to pay lower wages (to Work Permit holders), if they can't pass the English proficiency test.

Those chinese are not permissible for Employment Pass as per Singapore laws, since the salary is less than $3000 per month.

The work permit on which they came has clear conditions (which they agreed to, before arriving in Singapore).

They are free to leave, if they find their wages low or for any other reasons.

Let market decide the wages, in a market economy. Singapore isn't a "welfare state", especially for foreign citizens.

I am also a foreigner in Singapore ... will laugh my guts out, if someone suggested to me that I should go on strike here to demand more wages. :laugh:

Anyway, the response of the Singapore govt is much appreciated. They could have simply deported the wrong doers. But it's sensible to follow up as per the laws of the nation.
 
5th China bus driver charged, 29 more to be sent back home

630afp-Labouraction3-png_130330.png


[UPDATE on 1 Dec: Fifth bus driver charged, 29 more to be sent back home to China]

A fifth SMRT bus driver from mainland China was charged on Saturday for instigating and inciting the mass strike earlier this week.

Another 29 bus drivers who took part in either or on both days of the strike have had their work permits revoked and will be sent home back to China.

The bus drivers who persisted in the strike were absent on either or both days of the illegal strike without reason. Some had medical certificates, but notwithstanding this, there is evidence of their involvement in the strike.

In a hastily arrranged press conference on Saturday, Manpower Minister Tan Chuan Jin said these latest actions had been taken after police had "substantially completed" its investigation into the "planned and pre-meditated" mass strike earlier this week of 171 bus drivers.

A joint statement by MOM and Ministry of Home Affairs said that barring any new developments, no further arrests or repatriations related to the illegal strike will be made. Warnings have been issued to the other drivers who were involved, but no further action will be taken against them.

Earlier on Thursday, four Chinese nationals were charged for engaging in a conspiracy to get SMRT bus drivers to take part in an illegal strike earlier this week.

Those charged -- He Jun Ling, 32; Gao Yue Qiang, 32; Weng Xianjie, 39; and Liu Xiangying, 33 -- had been arrested by police over Wednesday and Thursday. If convicted, they -- along with the fifth driver -- will face a fine not exceeding $2,000 or imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months or both on each charge.

Seen as the ringleaders, Gao, Weng and Liu each face one count while He faces two counts of inciting SMRT workmen on Sunday evening at Block 21 Woodlands Sector 1 to take part in the strike, which started the day after.

According to the charge sheets, He made a post in the Chinese language on http://tieba.baidu.com titled "The insults and humiliations suffered by Singapore drivers (SMRT) (where is the dignity of the People's Republic of China bus drivers)"

"... f a few hundred Chinese nationals take the lead, I am afraid the management of SMRT will be fired instead, not that we do not know the traffic situation in Singapore, a few hundred bus drivers do not report for work for a few days, there will be public outcry in Singapore," he said in the post.

"Rational and hot-blooded fellow workers have to take action! Let's go on MC together tomorrow, 26, Monday and 27, Tuesday. We have to depend on ourselves for our dignity and interest..."

He asked that the message be relayed to as many as possible and for them not to be afraid of traitors.

"Boycott and despise those who are not taking any action, they will suffer guilty conscience. It concerns the interest of everybody," he concluded.

The four men are charged under section 10(a) of the Criminal Law (Temporary Provisions) Act (Chapter 67) read with section 109 of the Penal Code (Chapter 224), a non-bailable offence.

Minister of State for Transport and Finance Josephine Teo said on Thursday the government had to take the strike "very seriously", noting that the police pressed charges after establishing the facts.

"Maintaining industrial harmony is especially important for Singapore, particularly because public transport is an essential service," she said. "As for the next course of action, the police are continuing investigations and need to assess whether further action needs to be taken. The charges have been read out, I suggest we not speculate further."

"We value the industrial harmony that we have built up over the years, and what has happened has damaged (this), and swift action must be carried out," added Minister of State for Manpower and Health Amy Khor. "We cannot tolerate employees taking matters into their own hands, and I think we need to continue to stress the fact that there are rules to follow and processes in place."

Khor and Teo both said they understood the drivers' grievances, however, and agreed that SMRT needs to "look seriously into the requests and feedback they have provided, and in good time give a proper response".

Added Khor, "The employers should also review their HR practices as well as how they can have constant communication with their employees."

On Monday, over 170 SMRT bus drivers from China staying at a workers' dormitory in Woodlands refused to go to work in protest over the disparity in their pay compared to their Malaysian counterparts.

More than half the number also did not turn up on Tuesday but but Wednesday all the workers except those with medical reasons had gone back to work.

Acting Manpower Minister Tan Chuan Jin called the mass action as an "illegal strike" that was "unacceptable" and would be dealt with accordance to the law.

5th China bus driver charged, 29 more to be sent back home - Yahoo! News Singapore
 
^^^ Looks like a fair outcome (and entirely expected).

Good to see that Singapore doesn't take $hit .... and yet another re-assurance that Singpaore isn't going down the "hongkong way". :tup:
 
Damn, no right to strike? Is this the Singapore Model that China wants to emulate?
 
Damn, no right to strike? Is this the Singapore Model that China wants to emulate?

The right to strike is there .... but what is illegal is that this was a "strike with chinese characteristics." :laugh:

You don't follow the law and you go to jail / or get deported.

Further, those who are going to jai were inciting others to join the illegal strike too.. something funny they wrote below in some language which "people without chinese characteristics" :laugh: can't understand. Anyway, the "evidence" cited is displayed below. Nay, you can't do this in Singapore, as per the law...:

630Screen-SMRTpost-jpg_113138.jpg


What's most surprising is that the "above" inciting others into illegal action is illegal in their own country.

Perhaps they should have tried this in USA ... and probably got away. :laugh:
 

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