Labour rallies move overseas
As protests in Cambodia become scarce in the wake of
authorities opening fire on demonstrators near Canadia Industrial Park,
killing at least four people, labour and human rights advocates across
the globe are showing solidarity with demonstrations of their own.
Since the deadly incident on January 3, protesters have gathered at
Cambodian embassies in more than a dozen countries to publicly condemn
the shooting of unarmed demonstrators.
“The shooting against the protesters cannot be justified at all,”
said Mikyung Ryu, international director of the Korean Confederation of
Trade Unions, which has organised three demonstrations in South Korea.
“On no grounds should the military fire on protesters.”
Before the crackdown, the South Korean government allegedly
encouraged Cambodian authorities to take a hard line against striking
garment workers.
Protests have also occurred at Cambodian embassies in the
Philippines, Hong Kong, Thailand, Indonesia, Bangladesh, the United
Kingdom, Malaysia, the United States, India, Germany and Turkey, said
Joel Preston, a consultant with the Community Legal Education Center.
An international group of at least 10 labour groups, calling
themselves in a letter the World Solidarity Action to Support Garment
Workers and Release Union Activist and Workers in Cambodia, have
coordinated with each other to compel government officials and clothing
brands that buy from Cambodia to launch an investigation into the
incident.
In a rally at the Cambodian embassy in Washington, DC on Friday,
Cambodian Ambassador Hem Heng met with organisers, said Jeff Hermanson,
director of Global Strategies for Workers United, Service Employees
International Union.
“We told him we would continue protesting until the workers’ rights
were restored . . . and negotiation resumed,” Hermanson said in an
email.
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