300,000 Cambodian garment workers join anti-government protests
Thousands
of Cambodian garment workers on Thursday joined anti-government
protests demanding that Prime Minister Hun Sen step down and call a new
election.
The opposition had urged the textile industry’s vast workforce to
join its daily rallies in the capital against Hun Sen, and the workers’
participation is a boost to efforts to challenge the long-ruling
strongman.
Hun Sen last week rejected opposition calls for him to step down and
call a new vote to settle allegations of vote-rigging in July elections.
The protests Thursday coincided with a strike by about 300,000 garment workers for higher pay.
The workers are demanding a minimum wage of $160 per month in 2014.
Rong Chhun, president of the Cambodian Confederation of Unions, said the strike had forced many factories to stop work.
“We cannot accept the increase. It is so little. The workers will
continue with the strike if there is no resolution,” he told AFP.
Disputes over wages and safety conditions in Cambodia’s lucrative
garment industry are frequent. The multi-billion dollar industry employs
about 650,000 people and is a key source of foreign income for the
impoverished country.
The opposition party has boycotted parliament since the election.
Parliament in late September approved a new five-year term for Hun
Sen, despite the absence of opposition MPs, in a move decried by the
opposition as a “constitutional coup”.
Hun Sen — a 61-year-old former Khmer Rouge cadre who defected and
oversaw Cambodia’s rise from the ashes of war — has ruled for 28 years,
and has vowed to continue until he is 74.
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