The angry employees staged a demonstration yesterday outside the offices of the state-owned China Railway Seventh Group in Uganda's capital, Kampala.
One of the workers, Agnes Namusisi, said managers pay employees who agree to their sexual advances.
"I have not been paid for the last three months because I refused sexual advances from my boss," Namusisi said. The alleged mistreatment also includes long hours and supervisors beating workers who are delayed getting to their jobs, she said.
"We have decided that workers temporarily stop working until Thursday as we engage the managers of the company," Turwakabale said
Kampala Mayor Erias Lukwago said the city would consider "blacklisting" the Chinese company, if it doesn't address the workers' concerns.
The World Bank canceled a 225-kilometer (140-mile) road construction project in western Uganda worth USD 265 million in December 2015 after a review found evidence of misconduct by a government contractor, including sexual harassment of female workers and road workers having sex with minors.
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