Can employees strike legally in Myanmar?
Yes. Strikes are legal in Myanmar under the Labour Organization Law 2011 with at least 14 days' prior notice given through a registered labour organisation to the employer and the township labour office. Essential services — water, electricity, hospitals, certain state-owned enterprises — are excluded. Wildcat strikes without notice are not protected and can ground termination.
What Myanmar law says
Yes — employees can strike legally in Myanmar under the Labour Organization Law 2011. The procedural rules are:
- The strike must be called by a registered labour organisation.
- 14 days' prior notice must be given to the employer and the township labour office.
- The notice must specify the dispute, the proposed strike date, and the workers involved.
- Essential services — water, electricity, hospitals, certain state-owned enterprises — are excluded.
- Strikes during the conciliation or arbitration window are not protected.
Strikes that bypass these procedural rules — wildcat strikes — are not protected. Employees who participate may be subject to disciplinary action including termination for misconduct under ESDL 2013, and the strike itself may not pause the dispute timeline.
Strike rules at a glance
| Element | Rule |
|---|---|
| Right to strike | Recognised |
| Notice period | 14 days |
| Notice to | Employer + township labour office |
| Caller | Registered labour organisation |
| Essential services | Excluded |
| During conciliation/arbitration | Not protected |
| Wildcat strike | Not protected; disciplinary exposure |
Edge cases
- Lockout — employer counterpart; same notice rules apply.
- Sympathy strike — must still meet the 14-day notice rule.
- Partial work stoppage — go-slow, work-to-rule — fall within the strike framework if organised.
- Multi-site strike — notice must list each affected site.
- Health and safety walkout — distinct from strike when based on imminent OSH hazard; OSH-Law right to refuse unsafe work applies.
Records and inspections
Strike notices, conciliation records, and any subsequent settlement agreements should be retained ≥ 7 years. The township labour office processes the strike-notice intake. The Conciliation Body and Arbitration Council handle the substantive dispute under the Settlement of Labour Disputes Law. Records of the underlying dispute (wages, OT, harassment, etc.) carry their own retention.
Employer takeaway
Strikes are legal in Myanmar with 14-day prior notice through a registered labour organisation, served on the employer and township labour office. Essential services are excluded. Strikes during conciliation or arbitration are not protected. Wildcat strikes carry disciplinary exposure for participants. Maintain a strike-response SOP, engage with the Conciliation Body promptly, and retain records for 7 years.
Common mistakes
- Treating an OSH-grade walkout as a strike when the right-to-refuse-unsafe-work framework applies.
- Penalising lawful 14-day-notice strikers — direct breach of anti-retaliation protection.
- Assuming that "the issue is small" lifts the 14-day-notice rule for wildcat action.
- Skipping conciliation and treating arbitration as the first resort.
Related reading: are trade unions legal, Labour Organization Law 2011 coverage, and dispute resolution process.
- Labour Organization Law 2011 — Strike notice and procedure
- Settlement of Labour Disputes Law — Collective dispute interface
- Compliance Calendar — Strike-notice records
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