玩具巨头华盛同日关闭广西四家工厂,5000工人连日集会索赔(2026.04.22-23)

「玩具巨头华盛同日关闭广西四家工厂,5000工人连日集会索赔(2026.04.22-23)」2026年4月20日,广西”三月三”假期结束后的首个工作日,港资玩具代工巨头华盛玩具旗下四家广西工厂:容县华耀玩具制造有限公司、北流华盛盈峰玩具制造有限公司、北流万峰玩具有限公司、北流创峰塑胶电子制品有限公司,同日宣告倒闭,近万名工人骤然失业。此后两日,工人连续发起维权行动,要求公司结清欠薪、依法足额赔偿,但截至4月22日下午,仍未取得任何实质进展。

公司声明回避具体标准

在向员工发出的停业通知中,华盛将此次关厂归因于外部经济环境。公司称,近年来中美关税贸易摩擦持续加剧,海外经营环境持续恶化,公司被产品终端海外客户拖欠巨额货款,导致资金链断裂,自即日起正式停止所有经营业务。公司虽在通知中声称将”优先保障员工工资、经济补偿金等法定权益”。却对具体赔偿标准、金额及时间节点均未作任何说明。工人们对此高度警惕,就在不久前,华盛对另外一家旗下工厂的失业工人,只勉强给出了“0.5N”的赔偿。而按中国《劳动法》规定,华盛最少也要按“N+1”标准赔偿。

不按规赔偿早有先例

华盛玩具1976年创立于香港,1981年首次进入中国内地设厂。四十余年间,先后在广东、广西及越南开设共11家工厂,总厂区面积逾200万平方米,员工约两万人,规模位居全球玩具代工前列。然而,近年来,随着贸易环境持续恶化、订单不断萎缩,华盛实际已陷入连年亏损。2025年底:同属华盛旗下、拥有26年历史的东莞长荣玩具厂,因订单暴跌而宣告结业。彼时,公司拒绝依劳动法标准足额赔偿工人,引发工人连日维权,最终以“法定标准打五折”赔偿草草了结。长荣案例的前车之鉴,令广西工人清醒的认识到:在当前就业市场持续萎缩的背景下,工厂一关,再找一份同等待遇的工作几乎是奢望。他们所能依靠的,只有走上街头,用自己的抗争换取一个公正的说法。

连日维权,当局介入

4月21日上午,除万峰玩具以外的三家工厂约5000名工人分别发起维权行动。在容县华耀厂和北流盈峰厂,工人们分别阻断了工厂外的道路交通,希望引起社会关注。盈峰厂的部分工人还登上了厂房的楼顶,展示了三面巨大的横幅。而在北流创峰厂,工人们除了集会外,还在厂房外打出横幅:”青春全献给华盛,破产别破良心债,还我血汗钱。” 在北流和容县,当局均出动了警察到现场驱逐维权工人,但未引发冲突。22日,工人继续维权,据悉,玉林市一名副市长已介入,但截至当天下午,工人的维权行动仍未取得任何实质性进展。

近年来,随着经济的持续下行,中国的大批工厂接连倒下,而承受最惨重代价的,始终是那些流水线上的普通工人。

Toy Giant Wah Shing Shutters Four Guangxi Factories in One Day; 5,000 Workers Rally for Compensation (2026.04.22–23)

On April 20, 2026 — the first workday after Guangxi’s “March Third” holiday — four Guangxi factories under Hong Kong toy manufacturing giant Wah Shing Toys simultaneously announced their closure: Rongxian Huayao Toy Manufacturing Co., Ltd., Beiliu Wah Shing Yingfeng Toy Manufacturing Co., Ltd., Beiliu Wanfeng Toys Co., Ltd., and Beiliu Chuangfeng Plastic & Electronics Co., Ltd. Nearly ten thousand workers were left jobless overnight. For two consecutive days, workers staged protests demanding full payment of owed wages and legally mandated severance, but as of the afternoon of April 22, no substantive progress had been made.

Company Statement Sidesteps Specifics

In the closure notice issued to employees, Wah Shing attributed the shutdown to the external economic environment. The company stated that escalating US-China tariff tensions in recent years had caused overseas business conditions to deteriorate sharply, with end clients withholding enormous sums in unpaid orders, ultimately causing a cash flow collapse. All business operations were to cease with immediate effect. While the notice claimed the company would “prioritize employees’ statutory rights, including wages and severance pay,” it provided no details whatsoever on compensation standards, amounts, or timelines. Workers were deeply alarmed: not long ago, Wah Shing had offered workers at another of its closed factories a payout of just 0.5N — half the legal minimum. Under China’s Labor Law, the company is required to pay at minimum the N+1 standard.

A Track Record of Shortchanging Workers

Wah Shing Toys was founded in Hong Kong in 1976 and first established factories in mainland China in 1981. Over more than four decades, it opened 11 factories across Guangdong, Guangxi, and Vietnam, with a total floor area exceeding two million square meters and a workforce of around twenty thousand, ranking among the world’s largest toy contract manufacturers. In recent years, however, as the trade environment worsened and orders continued to shrink, Wah Shing had in fact been running losses year after year. In late 2025, Changrong Toy Factory in Dongguan — a 26-year-old Wah Shing subsidiary — announced its closure after orders plummeted. At the time, the company refused to pay workers the full compensation required by law, triggering days of protests, and the dispute was ultimately settled at just half the legally mandated amount. With the Changrong case as a stark warning, Guangxi workers understood clearly: in a job market that keeps shrinking, once a factory closes, finding comparable work again is nearly impossible. Taking to the streets was the only option left — to fight for a just outcome.

Days of Protest, Authorities Step In

On the morning of April 21, around 5,000 workers from three of the four factories — all except Wanfeng Toys — launched separate protest actions. At Rongxian Huayao and Beiliu Yingfeng, workers blocked the roads outside the factories to draw public attention. Some workers at Yingfeng also climbed onto the factory rooftop and unfurled three large banners. At Beiliu Chuangfeng, workers gathered and hung banners outside the factory reading: “We gave our youth to Wah Shing — don’t go bankrupt on your conscience. Pay us what we’re owed.” In both Beiliu and Rongxian, authorities deployed police to disperse the protesters, but no clashes were reported. On the 22nd, workers continued their demonstrations. A Yulin city vice-mayor was reported to have stepped in to mediate, but as of that afternoon, the workers’ efforts had still yielded no substantive results.

As China’s economy continues its prolonged decline, factories across the country have been shutting down one after another. And those who bear the heaviest cost are always the ordinary workers on the assembly line.

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