Adidas launches probe into Myanmar supplier after mass worker dismissals - Just Style
Adidas under fire over Myanmar suppliers sacking protesting workers | Sport | The Times
Adidas begins sourcing from Myanmar | Materials & Production News | News
Myanmar workers reject unfair re-employment offer from Taiwanese-owned Adidas | Mizzima Myanmar News and Insight
Adidas Boost Sneaker: Buy Online at Best Prices in Myanmar | Shop.com.mm
adidas Racer TR 2.0 Shoes - Blue | adidas QA
Facebook
Adidas Sport Shoes (Factory)
Sacked Myanmar Workers Appeal to Adidas after Junta Breaks Factory Strike
Twitter 上的Loft Saint Germain:"@adidas don't care about massacre against #Rohingya Shoes made by genocidal state Shame on u adidas and your support at #Birmanie #Myanmar https://t.co/5Y91IqpZlC" / Twitter
$150 World Cup Jerseys Made by Workers Getting $2.27 a Day - The New York Times
adidas store myanmar added a new photo. - adidas store myanmar
UNBOXING Adidas Runfalcon Full Black Original made in Myanmar - YouTube
Garment workers sacked for demanding long overdue wage rise | Frontier Myanmar
adidas News Site | Press Resources for all Brands, Sports and Innovations
Adidas to Source in Myanmar – Sourcing Journal
Myanmar unions call on brands to join ACT in fight for living wage | IndustriALL
adidas store - Myanmar Plaza | Yangon
Hundreds jobless as Adidas supplier shuts down amid dispute | Frontier Myanmar
Workers protest in front of Shyang Jhuo Yue Co., Ltd, a Taiwanese owned sports shoe manufacturer, which supplies German sportswear brand Adidas, after the sudden factory shut down left 700 without work,
Yangon factory and Adidas supplier sacks nearly 30 workers for striking in demand of wage increase | Myanmar NOW
Adidas Starts Sourcing from Myanmar | Myanmar Business Today
Asia Floor Wage Alliance on Twitter: "Workers of the @adidas supplier factory Myanmar #PouChen are on strike today, demanding a wage increase from 4,800 kyat ($2.29) to 8,000 kyat ($3.80). Their 20+
Taiwanese producer of Adidas footwear won't reinstate 26 fired workers in Myanmar — Radio Free Asia