What Myanmar law says
An employee who believes a termination was unlawful, or that final payments are wrong, files a complaint at the township labour office first. This is the entry point for every ESDL or wage dispute. If the township office cannot resolve, the matter moves to the Conciliation Body under the Settlement of Labour Disputes Law and finally to the Arbitration Council. The statute of limitations for filing is typically 6 months from the disputed action.
Three-step challenge process
- Township labour office — file a written complaint; the office mediates between employer and employee.
- Conciliation Body — formal conciliation if the township office cannot resolve; binding agreement if both sides agree.
- Arbitration Council — binding arbitration if conciliation fails. Court is rarely the next step.
What to file with the complaint
- Signed employment contract.
- Termination letter (or evidence of dismissal if none was issued).
- Pay slips for the last 6 months.
- Final settlement statement, if any.
- Correspondence (emails, memos) supporting the claim.
- Witness statements where relevant.
What if there's a dispute
- Township labour office first — every complaint starts here, with mediation between the parties.
- Conciliation Body — formal conciliation under the Settlement of Labour Disputes Law.
- Arbitration Council — final binding step. Statute of limitations: typically 6 months.
Employer takeaway
Expect any contested termination to land at the township labour office. Bring the contract, payslips, PIP/warnings or investigation file, termination letter, and final settlement statement. Have a Myanmar-language version of every document. Run final settlement (wages + leave encashment + notice + severance) within 7 days of last working day to reduce dispute risk. Keep records for at least 7 years.
Edge cases and unenforceable clauses
- Out-of-time complaint — typically barred after 6 months.
- Pre-arbitration settlement — common; settlement agreement should be in writing and bilingual.
- Constructive-dismissal claims — see constructive dismissal.
- See role of the township labour office.
Common challenge mistakes
- Going straight to a lawyer rather than the township labour office.
- Missing the 6-month statute of limitations.
- Filing without supporting documents.
- Ignoring township office summonses — escalates to the Conciliation Body and Arbitration Council.
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