Protests at poor wages and working conditions have gained in intensity since the collapse of the Rana Plaza factory complex in April, which killed 1,135 people.
Police said violence erupted at Ashulia, home to Bangladesh's biggest garment plants which make clothing for top Western retailers such as Walmart, at Konabari in the industrial district of Gazipur north of Dhaka and in other parts of Gazipur.
The trigger for the new protests was worker unhappiness at the new minimum wage the government has announced for the country's four million garment workers.
The new wages still leave Bangladeshi garment workers as some of the lowest paid in the sector worldwide.
"At least 10,000 workers demonstrated at Konabari. They threw rocks at the officers. We fired rubber bullets and tear gas," Shamsur Rahman, a spokesman for the industrial police, told AFP.
Rahman said the new wage scale has angered senior sewing operators who said their pay differentials have been downgraded.
He rejected the skilled workers' complaints.
But union leader Babul Akter said the new pay scales treated many workers unfairly.
"The workers are angry the government has not kept its word to make the new wage effective from Sunday. Skilled workers are not happy because they did not get the same hike as entry-level workers," he said.
"Besides, in some factories, the new pay scale will lead to a cut in food and transport allowances. In the new scale, the annual wage increment has been fixed at five per cent while workers in many factories already get annual increments of eight to 15 per cent," he added.
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