Strike picks up steam
A
nationwide garment factory strike began to take shape yesterday, as
workers took to the streets a day after the Ministry of Labour announced
they would raise the industry’s minimum wage by less than a quarter of
what union leaders had demanded.
Union leaders immediately decried
the Labour Ministry’s decision to raise minimum salaries in the garment
sector to $95 in April, rather than the $160 minimum wage they
supported.
“I hope officials will negotiate again on the minimum
wage in order to end this dispute,” said Pav Sina, president of the
Collective Union of Movement of Workers (CUMW). “If the government or
the employers don’t, protests will grow larger and larger without
ending.”
As of yesterday, 94 factories across Phnom Penh and
several provinces had shuttered to join the strike, according to the
Free Trade Union (FTU).
The statement predicts about 200,000 garment workers from 300 factories in the Kingdom will join the strike.
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Chan Thoeun was one of about 10,000 strikers who met opposition leader
Sam Rainsy yesterday at a Russey Keo district pagoda after a
10-kilometre march.
“$95 per month cannot make our lives better, it cannot support our families,” Chan Thoeun said.
Although
planning on striking, Kleng Vichey, 23, from Evergreen Apparel
(Cambodia) Co., Ltd. showed up for work yesterday because his union,
C.CAWDU, has not yet sent a letter informing the factory of the intended
strike, he said.
A statement released by the Cambodian Center for
Human Rights on Tuesday aired concern over a letter the Garment
Manufacturers Association in Cambodia sent to the Labour Ministry last
week, urging the government to enforce a zero-tolerance policy toward
“illegal” strikes.
“Regardless of the legality of the strike, a
zero-tolerance policy will only ignore the root causes of the labor
(sic) dispute and most likely lead to further violent crackdowns,”
CCHR’s statement said.
In one of several demonstrations yesterday,
hundreds of FTU demonstrators in Kampong Cham province yesterday
blocked the Kisona Bridge for about three hours, said Yen Sokheang,
FTU’s Kampong Cham president.
The Labour Ministry yesterday
released a statement saying that unions rejecting the government’s wage
decision would be “legally responsible for... anything that happens
during the strike.”
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