“Rainsy is an economist and saw that profits from the industry were not helping workers – who were still poor and sick,” said Chea Mony, current FTU president and Vichea’s brother. “In the time since, I have not seen anyone help garment workers as much as Sam Rainsy has.”
Protest paths converge
Drawing
on leader Sam Rainsy’s deep connections to the labour movement, the
Cambodia National Rescue Party announced plans to mobilise strikers at
factories this morning and lead thousands on marches around Phnom Penh.
CNRP
spokesman Yim Sovann said last night that elected lawmakers would be
sent to factories to meet workers striking over the garment sector's
minimum wage.
“We will invite them to Freedom Park, and in the afternoon, we will march together around the city,” he said.
CNRP
lawmaker elect Mu Sochua last night posted on her Twitter account that
she would “mobilise” workers in Kampong Chhnang at 7am and party leader
Sam Rainsy would do the same at the Sabrina Garment factory in Kampong
Speu.
Although opposition demonstrations since July’s election have invariably involved garment workers, only in recent days – as they have begun striking across the country – has the CNRP intensified its focus on them.
The industry’s 400,000-plus workers are considered a
demographic that contributed to the CNRP making significant gains at
July’s election, which was awarded to the ruling Cambodian People’s
Party, 68 seats to 55.
Since Monday, Rainsy has made two trips to
Svay Rieng province to address workers on strike and toured garment
factory districts in the capital as part of the CNRP’s push for Prime
Minister Hun Sen to resign or call a snap election.
For Rainsy,
homing in on garment workers’ demands is nothing new. After his
departure from Funcinpec in 1994 led him to form the Khmer Nation Party,
Rainsy set about penetrating the world of state-controlled unions in a
rapidly expanding garment sector.
“[Rainsy], with the help of a
few union union activists, started to organise local unions to counter
unions identified with the ruling party,” note Veasna Nuon and Melisa
Serano in their book, Building Unions in Cambodia. “Rainsy,
together with Chea Vichea, who became his successor, subsequently led
the formation of [FTU] in 1996 to support the opposition’s campaign.”
Rainsy
has been quoted as saying that he and Vichea – who was murdered in 2004
– organised the first strikes demanding higher wages.
“Rainsy is
an economist and saw that profits from the industry were not helping
workers – who were still poor and sick,” said Chea Mony, current FTU
president and Vichea’s brother. “In the time since, I have not seen
anyone help garment workers as much as Sam Rainsy has.”
He
spent years in self-imposed exile to avoid a since-overturned prison
sentence, while independent political analyst Chea Vannath said
yesterday that the FTU’s creation paved the way for periods of
non-political unionism in many factories.
“Later on, they had their own unions and they began disconnecting with politics and trying to stay independent,” she said.
Speaking
in Svay Rieng yesterday, however, Rainsy left no doubt in the mind of
garment workers that he is very much focused on addressing their
grievances.
“All the workers in Phnom Penh will rally in Freedom
Park,” he said. “So I call on all of you to keep struggling until your
demands for a $160 minimum wage are met.”
Workers have been
pouring out of factories in protest since the Ministry of Labour on
Tuesday set the new minimum wage at $95, including a health bonus,
beginning in April.
The CNRP’s willingness to seize upon the
strikes was inappropriate, Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan
said yesterday “[The CNRP] is trying everything to get rid of the prime
minister. Wages should be separate,” he said. “[The garment workers] are
not politically oriented – they’re just striking for better salary.”
The
fusion of opposition protests and strikes became more obvious yesterday
when the biggest crowd since Sunday turned out to support the CNRP.
Kem
Sokha said in Freedom Park last night that an official CNRP campaign to
help workers secure a $160 monthly minimum wage will begin today.
Earlier,
in Russey Keo district, he continued calls for a snap election, saying
CNRP leaders, if elected, would deliver the wage increase workers wanted
or stand down.
Leaders also spoke of the involvement of teachers and civil servants in protests.
Rainsy said last night that people should prepare for at least 1 million people demonstrating in Phnom Penh on Sunday.
“This is a giant wave that cannot be stopped.”
But
in continuing with the demonstrations, Siphan said, the “will of the
majority of Cambodia has been hijacked”. The CNRP, he added, would have
to take responsibility if protesters damaged state or public property.'
Vannath,
the independent political analyst, said the CNRP was playing a “very
risky game” trying to stir up emotions among garment workers over wages
while the party was holding its own protests.
“I know it’s a noble
cause to raise salaries, and I support that cause,” she said. “But I
think the timing is not good … and it could become chaotic.”
King Norodom Sihamoni needs to call the two parties together for talks, she added.
“Without the King’s intervention, the two parties have too much ego to make any concession.”
In defence of the CNRP’s actions, however, Sovann said leaders were not inciting workers.
“It’s
nothing to do with politics – our platform is just similar to their
demands,” he said. “The workers have been demonstrating themselves, they
are doing it themselves,” he said.
Adding to that, FTU’s Mony said workers were big fans of Rainsy.
“They know his history dates back to 1996,” he said.
“They want him as prime minister … because they think it will make their living standards better.”
Don't destroy all precious promise with our Khmer people. Power without a great and strong foundation will never last LONG! Khmer rouge fall and now cpp will fall down soon too . Good to let them FALL as a RIPENING FRUIT. Lon Nol regime lost to Khmer rouge because Lon Nol scare of Khmer rouge threaten him by words and did not know the truth is Khmer rouge don't have much left to fight with Lon Nol. Please remember yourn win so many wars so watch out and we have to know that we are smart and cleaver too. Lately hun sen spoke in a very soft TONE!!! He is ah cropoeur (crocodile) in the summer time with no water. cpp have a strategy very clear one guy talk loud another one talk nice but all of them belong to yourn.
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