At least three people were killed and dozens more injured when police in Bangladesh clashed with garment factory workers demanding better pay, police have said.
The workers say wages have not gone up, even though rises were due last month. Police tried to disperse protesters attacking factories and smashing vehicles in Chittagong Export Procession Zone (CEPZ) on Sunday, police official Reza al-Hasan said.
Local media said one of the men killed was a 35-year-old rickshaw puller in Chittagong, but it was unclear how he had died.
At least 50 people were injured during the unrest in Chittagong.
Almost all factories in the CEPZ are closed because of the protests, officials said.
The BBC's Anbarasan Ethirajan, in Dhaka, says demonstrations on Saturday forced a South Korean company to shut down all its 11 factories there.
Scores more were injured in Dhaka, where thousands of workers gathered outside their factory in an industrial area of the city early in the morning in protest against its closure as a result of the disturbances.
Roads in Dhaka were blocked and at least two vehicles set on fire, police said. Labour unions say many of the factories are not implementing the new salary scale announced by a government wage board earlier this year.
From November, the factories should have been paying a wage of at least $43 (£27) a month.
Around Dhaka, workers in some factories have been protesting for a number of days, demanding increased pay.
More than three million people, mostly women, work in Bangladesh's garment industry, which supplies many major Western stores and is a key sector of the country's economy.
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