Strike numbers swell
Arriving
in bursts of 20, 30 and 50 at a time, thousands of garment workers
filled Freedom Park yesterday afternoon, shouting slogans and holding
aloft cardboard sheets bearing the figure “$160” hand-written in marker,
amid a quickly growing national strike.
The Garment Manufacturers
Association in Cambodia (GMAC) reacted to the fluid situation earlier
in the day, “strongly" suggesting its 473 member factories close until
Monday in order to avoid possible strike-related violence and property
damage, while the Ministry of Labour invited members of six unions to
discuss a resolution at an emergency meeting today.
The explosion
of strikers came two days after the Ministry of Labour announced it
would raise Cambodian garment workers’ minimum wage – which now stands
at $80, including a health bonus – to $95, rather than the $160 workers
and unions demanded.
While none
of his employees went on strike, Kang’s email said that a few hundred
people gathered outside Injae “with [a] microphone and stones” and made
threats yesterday morning.
Him Phalla, administrative manager at
Huey Chuen (Cambodia) Corp Ltd in Dangkor district, said the factory
shut down upon receiving GMAC’s email yesterday morning. He remains
unsure whether it will be able to open on Monday. “I am not sure yet
whether they can start work on Monday, [we might] suspend production
longer than that, depending on the situation,” Phalla said.
The
approximately 20,000 demonstrators at Freedom Park yesterday doubled the
numbers seen at most Cambodia National Rescue Party demonstrations this
week.
CNRP president Sam Rainsy, who met with striking workers in
Kampong Speu and Svay Rieng this week, said the cohesion of the garment
strike and ongoing CNRP demonstrations will likely prove a boon to the
opposition, whose ongoing rallies enters its 13th straight day today.
“The
weight of workers is very important,” Rainsy said in an interview last
night. “Now, the workers have thrown their full weight into support for
the CNRP, so you can imagine this will have a big impact.”
Rainsy
has on multiple occasions encouraged garment workers to remain on strike
until they receive the wage they demand. Workers will not likely
receive any wages for the duration of the strike, but with factories
receiving a high volume of orders for springtime apparel right now and
the potential for some Cambodian companies to absorb China’s shrinking
garment output, Rainsy said, factory owners will probably find it
advantageous to pay the wage hike, rather than miss out on huge profit
potential.
“The timing of the strike is a very good one, because
the demand of garment production in Cambodia is strong and the factories
are eager to … meet the demand,” Rainsy said.
Advantageous as
the strike may be to the opposition’s cause, party members and lawmakers
had provided strikers only philosophical support and had not
“mobilised” workers during visits to factory areas yesterday, CNRP
spokesman Yim Sovann said.
“We do not mobilise the workers. We
just showed up to support what the workers demand,” he said. “They came
to Freedom Park themselves.”
FTU figures put the number of
striking factories at more than 200. According to GMAC figures, 240
factories within a 40 kilometre radius of Phnom Penh have been affected
and temporarily shuttered operations.
A letter from seven union
groups – the CUMW, FTU, the Coalition of Cambodian Apparel Workers’
Democratic Union (C.CAWDU), the Coalition of Cambodian Unions (CCU), the
Cambodian Alliance of Trade Unions (CATU), the Worker Friendship Union
Federation (WFUF) and the Independent Youth Trade Union (IYTU) –
addressed to GMAC executive committee chairman Van Sou Ieng and
forwarded to the Labour Ministry yesterday claimed that nearly 250,000
people would join the strike if their demands are not met within a week.
“If
you cannot meet all demands within one week, the unions and workers in
every [garment] factory in the country will join demonstrations,” the
letter says.
In addition to an industry-wide minimum wage of
$160, the letter demanded $3 for meals each day for all workers, justice
for people shot during a November clash between police and striking SL
Garment Processing (Cambodia) Ltd workers, and four other points.
C.CAWDU
president Ath Thorn said the seven-member coalition will consider
ending the strike if wages are raised to $160, but more demands may come
out of the woodwork as the strike continues.
“If there’s no progress, demands will get bigger and bigger,” Thorn said yesterday afternoon.
GMAC
secretary general Ken Loo has repeatedly said that most Cambodian
garment factories cannot afford to pay an immediate $80 wage hike, while
union leaders and labour rights advocates in the Kingdom have said they
believe factories exaggerate the financial impact wage increases would
pose.
In a press briefing last night, senior GMAC representatives
and a number of factory owners showed videos of scores of young men and
women forcing their way into two garment factories and knocking down a
gate and security barrier.
“They are outsiders – they are not our workers,” one factory owner said.
Kong
Sang, GMAC’s first deputy chairman, said factories are willing to
accept the strike, which was declared without any of the prerequisite
steps outlined in Cambodia’s labour law, but he asked alleged agitators
to respect the rights of people who want to work.
GMAC representatives said they did not know whether workers had been forced to go to Freedom Park.
The
rhetoric at Freedom Park was decidedly more labour-oriented yesterday,
as it appeared that a majority of demonstrators were associated with the
strike. Strikers came from all over Phnom Penh and outside the capital.
“Workers
in Kampong Chhnang, Kampong Cham, Kampong Speu and Kandal … and almost
everywhere in Phnom Penh protested and rallied at Freedom Park,” said
Pav Sina, president of union CUMW.
Huo Tong, a garment worker from
Kandal province at yesterday’s rally, placed much of the blame for the
strike on Prime Minister Hun Sen.
“I want to ask [Prime Minister]
Hun Sen why the government will not increase the minimum salary to $160
for workers,” Tong said. “If [Hun Sen] does not find a way, he must step
down.”
C.CAWDU president Thorn said unions involved with the
strike are considering bussing workers from other provinces into Phnom
Penh for the Freedom Park rallies.
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