MANILA,
Philippines (AP) — May Day moved beyond
its roots as an international workers’ holiday to a day of international
protest Tuesday, with rallies throughout Asia demanding wage increases and
marches planned across Europe over government-imposed austerity measures.
Europeans
will take to the streets to protest against the measures that are being blamed
for a big increase in the number of unemployed, particularly in Spain where one
in four people is out of work.
In the
United States, demonstrations, strikes and acts of civil disobedience are
planned, including what could be the country’s most visible Occupy rallies
since the anti-Wall Street encampments came down in the fall.
In
Asia, thousands of May Day protesters in the Philippines, Malaysia and Taiwan
demanded hikes in pay that they say has not kept up with rising consumer
prices, while also calling for lower school fees and expressing a variety of
other gripes.
“It is
always the case that low-income groups across Asia feel a disproportionately
larger impact of rising prices,” said Wai Ho Leong, a Singapore-based economist
with Barclays Capital. “Coupled with rising inflation expectations, the case is
building to do more for lower income (workers). Minimum wages are one way.”
In the
Philippine capital, Manila, about 8,000 members of a huge labor alliance, many
clad in red shirts and waving red streamers, marched under a brutal sun for 4
kilometers (2.5 miles) to the heavily barricaded Mendiola bridge near the
Malacanang presidential palace, which teemed with thousands of riot police,
Manila police chief Alex Gutierrez said.
Philippine
President Benigno Aquino III rejected their calls for a $3 daily pay hike,
which he warned could worsen inflation, spark layoffs and turn away foreign
investors.
Aside
from pay hikes, protest leader Josua Mata from the Alliance of Progressive
Labor urged Aquino to back proposed legislation against the widespread
practices by businesses of contracting out certain operations to other
companies to save on costs and preventing workers from organizing trade unions.
In
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, some 500 people rallied, calling for a higher minimum
wage than the one announced Monday by Prime Minister Najib Razak.
Najib’s
plan for the country’s first-ever minimum wage calls for minimum monthly pay of
900 ringgit ($297) for private-sector workers in peninsula Malaysia and 800
ringgit ($264) in two poor eastern states. The move is expected to benefit 3.2
million low-income workers, who account for about a third of the country’s work
force.
The
protesters marched from a market to the headquarters of Maybank, the nation’s
largest bank, calling for a minimum monthly wage of 1,500 ringgit ($496) a
month.
In
Taiwan, several thousand anti-government protesters marched through downtown
Taipei, demanding higher wages, lower school tuition and better conditions for
foreign workers.
AP
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