A union representing tens of thousands of workers at South Korean tech giant Samsung Electronics announced on Tuesday that it will hold a three-day strike later this month after negotiations failed.
“Starting from July 8, we will stage a three-day general strike,” Lee Hyun-kuk, vice president of the National Samsung Electronics Union, told AFP.
The union revealed the strike plans late Monday during a live YouTube broadcast, but did not specify the exact dates.
This action follows a one-day walkout in June, marking the first such collective action at the company, which had been non-unionized for decades.
Management at Samsung, the world’s largest producer of memory chips, has been in negotiations with the union since January.
Workers have rejected the offer of a 5.1 percent pay increase, with the union previously demanding improvements to annual leave and transparent performance-based bonuses.
In calling for the strike, the union stated that “management created this situation” by failing to offer significant concessions.
“What will change if we do not act. Will you just watch and do nothing? Will you be a hidden slave or an active owner? Nothing will change if we do not act,” its statement said.
“All employees need to participate in the strike. Let’s step up and change it!”
Samsung declined a request for comment.
Samsung Electronics avoided its employees unionising for almost 50 years — sometimes adopting ferocious tactics, according to critics — while rising to become the world’s largest smartphone and semiconductor manufacturer.
Company founder Lee Byung-chul, who died in 1987, was adamantly opposed to unions, saying he would never allow them “until I have dirt over my eyes”.
The first labour union at Samsung Electronics was formed in the late 2010s.