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MOM is either sleeping or not doing enough another STRIKE today

Wow, Another Strike By Banglas & Tiongs In Yishun

Construction workers in Singapore refuse to work, demand pay. (Photo courtesy of Andrew Loh)


The Chinese and Indian men are desperate. They have not been paid for the last two to three months. After a period of protracted and unsuccessful attempts to get their employer to pay them their salaries, the Chinese men finally decided to down tools about a month ago. The Indian workers did so Tuesday, 18 December. Together there are about 40 workers or so who are refusing to start work.

They are the workers of Sime Chong Construction Pte Ltd. The Chinese workers have been working in Singapore for some four to five years, and this is the first time that they have taken things into their own hands. The men say they have been told by their employer that the company has no money and thus could not pay them. "But the construction project is still carrying on," one of the men says, pointing to the ongoing construction of some HDB flats in Yishun where they are located, and which the company is involved in.

Four of the 20-odd Chinese men have decided to speak up. Each of them is owed a range of between S$2,400 to S$5,600 in salaries.

They have also approached the Ministry of Manpower (MOM) for help but to no avail so far. "The Manpower Ministry says if the company doesn't want to pay us, there is nothing it can do," one of the workers says. The rest nodded their heads in agreement.

The men have been given special passes (S-Pass) to stay in Singapore in order to resolve their pay dispute. However, the passes are valid only until the 26th of December. When asked what they would do if their employer still refuses to pay up, the men kept silent, unsure of their options. They repeated that the MOM had told them even it would not be able to do anything. What they face would be repatriation, without having their owed salaries recovered, as has happened to other workers in the past.

The ministry's attitude, the men say, was also one of apparent disinterest. One of the men says there was no response to his phone call when he tried calling the ministry. Another time, one of the men tried calling the ministry again but the official seemed impatient and only said that MOM will speak to their employer and hung up the phone.

According to the men, they approached the ministry twice — the first time on the 7th of November and the second time on the 15th of November. The 26th of December, on which date their S-Pass would expire, is effectively the deadline which they have to recover their salaries. So, the men are desperate.

One of them says his wife has been quite ill back home in China and he has requested to go home. But so far, there has been no response from his employer. Another man has a medical condition which requires surgery but he too has had his pleas ignored by his employer.

The Indian workers have downed tools only today and are awaiting the employer's response in the evening. They have been told by him that he will pay them their salaries on the same day. The workers have been owed two months' worth of salaries.

Such salary disputes are not new, and workers downing tools or even going on strike are happening more frequently in Singapore in recent times. The recent SMRT strike, while not entirely similar to this one, nonetheless tells a story of inadequate channels for resolution of such disputes, the failure of these so-called "proper channels", and the apparent lackadaisical attitude of ministry officials towards such complaints by workers. But more importantly, the disempowerment of the workers who are not only left to the mercy of their employers but also at the hands of the MOM.

The Employment Act is unequivocal about the offence of late payment or non-payment of salaries.

21. —(1) Salary earned by an employee under a contract of service, other than additional payments for overtime work, shall be paid before the expiry of the 7th day after the last day of the salary period in respect of which the salary is payable.

(2) Additional payments for overtime work shall be paid not later than 14 days after the last day of the salary period during which the overtime work was performed.

Yet, while there are numerous cases of salary disputes reported to the MOM, only a few of such offenders are prosecuted. In 2010, for example, there were a reported 4,000 pay-related complaints by foreign workers lodged with the ministry, but only four employers were prosecuted for failure to pay salaries.

While the ministry drags its feet on enforcement to make sure employers adhere to the law, it is the workers who have to endure the situation the best they could. Without any salaries paid to them for months, these workers from Sime Chong have to depend on aid from a migrant workers NGO which gives each of them S$30 a week for sustenance, barely enough to keep their heads above water while they go through the prolonged and uncertain process of trying to recover what rightly belong to them.

It would be a shame if these workers, who have held up their side of the contract, are eventually forcefully repatriated without their salaries being recovered — and through no fault of their own. For they have gone through the "proper channels" which the Acting Minister for Manpower recently spoke of. They have even approached his ministry for help, in fact. But thus far, it doesn't look like MOM is taking the matter as seriously as it should.

Will these workers face the same fate as Nepalese worker Rana Kumar Rai did last year? Rana was owed months' worth of salaries as well and he had approached the MOM and even won a court order in his attempt to recover his salary from his employer. But these were all to no avail — and he was sent home empty-handed.

Let's not pay lip service to protecting migrant workers, or in enforcing the law. Indeed, the situation faced by these Chinese and Indian workers are not new, as Alex Au — a volunteer with migrant NGO TWC2 — wrote here last year: Neither law nor morality at Manpower ministry.

If we are so quick to lay down "zero tolerance" for actions taken by workers, as the MOM did recently with regards to the SMRT workers' actions, then perhaps we too should lay down in no uncertain terms a similar "zero tolerance" for employers who flout the law, and who so blatantly exploit their helpless workers. Failure to prosecute these recalcitrant employers will only embolden others to do the same.

But what is more important than prosecuting employers is to recover the salaries owed to the workers. They have put in their honest days of work, they deserve their rightful salaries. There is no use prosecuting employers if in the end the workers do not receive what is rightfully theirs and are sent home empty-handed. We — the government, the ministry and us — would be complicit in such blatant exploitation of helpless workers.

Anything less than a recovery of salaries for the workers would be an injustice, and a mockery of all that the ministry has been saying these last few weeks, following the SMRT strike. We would have learnt nothing.
 
Re: Wow, Another Strike By Banglas & Tiongs In Yishun

Indian workers? But but but but........


I thought only china workers give problems?


Is this a mistake?
 
Re: Wow, Another Strike By Banglas & Tiongs In Yishun

Multi racial country must have multi racial strike!
 
Re: Wow, Another Strike By Banglas & Tiongs In Yishun

No pay = no work.

If they're not given their wages, they have every right to refuse to work.

If you don't draw the line, greedy capitalists will exploit you.
 
Re: Wow, Another Strike By Banglas & Tiongs In Yishun

This is good news
 
Re: Wow, Another Strike By Banglas & Tiongs In Yishun

Sime Chong Construction Pte.Ltd ? This type of SME always got cashflow problems.IF complain delay in salary payment to MOM,MOM also always act
blur like blur blob until the situation explode into strike or down tools,then they pretend pretend to show some concern for the workers.NTUC also pretend no sound no noise no picture until the case blows up,then they will issue some statements "O must follow proper channel for grievances,must give 2 weeks notice before u can strike " LOL ..LOL... ROFL....
 
Re: Wow, Another Strike By Banglas & Tiongs In Yishun

I wonder how can this happen in a booming property market?

Yah....Greed and Stupidity.
 
Re: Wow, Another Strike By Banglas & Tiongs In Yishun

I am dying to hear what the revered minister Tan Chuan Jin has to say.
Something brilliant again, I would suspect.
 
Re: Wow, Another Strike By Banglas & Tiongs In Yishun

Sime Chong Const , is this the main Con or Sub Con ?


tis type of funny name also can win contracts ?


is it the Cheapest bid ?

.
Sime Chong Construction Pte.Ltd ? This type of SME always got cashflow problems.IF complain delay in salary payment to MOM,MOM also always act
blur like blur blob until the situation explode into strike or down tools,then they pretend pretend to show some concern for the workers.NTUC also pretend no sound no noise no picture until the case blows up,then they will issue some statements "O must follow proper channel for grievances,must give 2 weeks notice before u can strike " LOL ..LOL... ROFL....
 
Re: Wow, Another Strike By Banglas & Tiongs In Yishun

Lemme guess... incoming free buffet and free prepaid SIM cards to smoothen the 'strained industrial relations'? :rolleyes:
 
Re: Wow, Another Strike By Banglas & Tiongs In Yishun

Sime Chong Const , is this the main Con or Sub Con ?


tis type of funny name also can win contracts ?


is it the Cheapest bid ?

.

Must be sub-sub-sub contractor,the cheapest,bestest,and fastest.
 
Re: Wow, Another Strike By Banglas & Tiongs In Yishun

Lemme guess... incoming free buffet and free prepaid SIM cards to smoothen the 'strained industrial relations'? :rolleyes:

I throw in one free fuck at Geylang to soften their stance.
 
Hey Zorro,

Cheapest, fastest and betterest?

Go get your fucking head examined.
 
Trouble In Paradise: Another 40 Workers Go On Strike

<a href="http://s1267.beta.photobucket.com/user/365Wildfire/media/630andrewloh_simeiconstruction_zpsa7efb5b0.jpg.html" target="_blank"><img src="http://i1267.photobucket.com/albums/jj559/365Wildfire/630andrewloh_simeiconstruction_zpsa7efb5b0.jpg" border="0" alt="Photobucket"/></a>

Some Indian construction workers in Yishun stopped working on Tuesday, joining colleagues from China
who put down their tools a month ago to demand payment of their salaries.

Together there are about 40 workers of Sime Chong Construction Pte Ltd. who are refusing to work.

The Chinese workers have been working in Singapore for some four to five years, and this is the first
time that they have taken things into their own hands.

Four of the 20-odd Chinese men have decided to speak up. Each of them is owed a range of between
S$2,400 to S$5,600 in salaries.

They say they have also approached the Ministry of Manpower (MOM) for help but to no avail so far. "The
Manpower Ministry says if the company doesn't want to pay us, there is nothing it can do," one of the
workers says. The rest nodded their heads in agreement.

The ministry's attitude, the men say, was also one of apparent disinterest. One of the men says there
was no response to his phone call when he tried calling the ministry. Another time, one of the men tried
calling the ministry again but the official seemed impatient and only said that MOM will speak to their
employer and hung up the phone.

According to the men, they approached the ministry twice — the first time on the 7th of November and
the second time on the 15th of November. The 26th of December, on which date their S-Pass would
expire, is effectively the deadline which they have to recover their salaries. So, the men are desperate.

The Indian workers have downed tools only Tuesday and are awaiting the employer's response in the
evening. They have been told by him that he will pay them their salaries on the same day. The workers
have been owed two months' worth of salaries.
 
Re: Another Strike In SG?

Ah Nehs in solidarity with their Ah Tiong brothers..

Neh Tiongs Power!!!!
 
Re: Trouble In Paradise: Another 40 Workers Go On Strike

Song ah! Ah Neh boleh!
 
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