ILO doubts bleak garment outlook
The International Labour Organization (ILO) yesterday cast
doubt on the Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia’s (GMAC)
bleak outlook for the rest of 2014, after the association claimed that
deadly violence sparked by wage disputes would result in clothing brands
reducing future orders.
Cautioning that comparisons between countries are difficult to make,
Bussi cited the world’s second-largest garment producing nation,
Bangladesh, as a place that had continued to prosper despite major
tensions.
“If you look at the data that was released at the end of the year for
Bangladesh, in a year that was quite severe in terms of the general
political environment in Bangladesh and in particular the issues within
the garment industry, they haven’t done very badly.
“I think they have done OK,” he said, adding that the industry continued to grow by over 30 per cent.
Bangladesh’s garment industry was thrown into the global spotlight in
November 2012, when a factory fire killed more than 100 people. Months
later, in April, international criticism reached new levels of outrage
following the collapse of the Rana Plaza factory, where nearly 1,300
workers perished.
“We haven’t observed a clear contraction in orders as a result of
even a very serious situation where 1,300 people lost their lives,”
Bussi said.
Van Sou Ieng, president of GMAC, said on Monday that a strike in the
sector over wages and an ensuing clash with government security forces
on Friday would cause orders to go down by 20 to 30 per cent in 2014. He
cited developments in Bangladesh as backup for the claims.
GMAC’s statements came at a meeting three days after military police
fired on protesting garment workers, killing at least four. Workers are
demanding a $160 minimum wage, $60 more than the current proposed rate.
The strike, which started late last year, appears to be petering out, as
workers short on money return to their jobs. Many of the hundreds of
factories are resuming normal production today.
Bussi said that if things remain at a “reasonable level of
stability”, Cambodia’s garment sector could grow at a growth rate of 20
per cent over the next five years.
Contacted again yesterday, Ieng said he hoped the ILO was correct,
but cautioned that the UN-backed body was not producing goods. “They are
not managing a factory,” he said.
Major brands including H&M, Gap, Levi’s and Adidas yesterday sent
an open letter to the government, manufacturers and trade unions,
calling for a peaceful resolution to the wage fight.
Also in the open letter, the brands expressed their concern over
“widespread civil unrest and the government’s deadly use of force.”
“The undersigned brands are committed to staying in Cambodia,” the joint statement read.
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