Seoul and Phnom Penh maintain a brotherly bond that goes beyond money. South Korea’s previous president was also an economic adviser to the Cambodian prime minister. Korea was the first democracy to congratulate the ruling party on an election July 2013 election win that human rights groups say was loaded with irregularities — and that sparked the wave of labor and political demonstrations that ended late last week.
South Korea [strange breed of Democrats, the S. Koreans!] urged Cambodia’s military to crack down on protesters
GlobalPost exclusive: As workers who stitch for Western brands demand a livable wage, South Korea urged Cambodian forces to protect corporate interests.
Global Post | 7 Jan. 2014
SEOUL, South Korea
and PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Conspiracy theorists frequently accuse rich
countries of “puppeteering” in the developing world, quietly pushing
governments to deploy thugs to protect wealthy — and sometime
abusive-corporations.
There is truth to this, but it's rare to uncover on-the-ground examples of how this string-pulling works.
In recent months, the impoverished Southeast Asian country has been
enmeshed in a series of strikes involving garment workers who stitch
clothes for Western brands. Workers are demanding a doubling of the
minimum wage, saying they can’t live on their current $80 monthly
income.
Late last week the government responded with a violent crackdown.
Elite units wielding Chinese-made weapons, batons, and steel pipes
chased protesters through the streets. Five were killed and dozens were
injured.
Although the garments are destined for the US, Europe and Japan,
South Korean companies reap much of the financial gain, playing the
role of middleman between laborers and Western brands. Korean-owned
factories employ legions of low-wage workers, churning out clothing for
fashion-hungry markets. In 2012, Seoul was the largest investor in the
country with $287 million in projects, beating out its behemoth of a
neighbor, China.
Now, South Korea has emerged as a behind-the-scenes actor in the crackdown. The embassy admits
that in recent weeks it has been running a backdoor campaignto protect
Korean business interests. This campaign has included turning to the
brutal and battle-hardened Cambodian military to implement security
measures.
Seoul and Phnom Penh maintain a brotherly bond that goes beyond
money. South Korea’s previous president was also an economic adviser to
the Cambodian prime minister. Korea was the first democracy to
congratulate the ruling party on an election July 2013 election win that
human rights groups say was loaded with irregularities — and that
sparked the wave of labor and political demonstrations that ended late
last week.
In other words, there are "national" interests at stake. Those
interests have apparently translated into protection for Korean
companies — particularly as protesters stepped up their game, launching
raucous assaults on factories.
On Thursday, an elite paratrooper unit showed up at a protest armed
with batons and steel pipes, beating a dozen monks and demonstrators in
front of a factory run by Yakjin, a joint Korean and American
corporation that supplies garments to Gap, Old Navy, American Eagle and
Walmart.
On Friday, the repression took a darker turn. Hundreds of battlefield
troops, including some from the prime minister’s personal bodyguard
brigade, shot and killed five demonstrators in another area of Phnom
Penh, the Canadia Industrial Park.
Sound terrible? Not everybody thinks so.
In a long-winded statement in Korean on Monday, the South Korean
embassy took credit for convincing the Cambodian government to
“understand the seriousness of this situation and act swiftly.” It cited
high-level lobbying over the past two weeks as contributing to the
“success” of protecting business interests.
The embassy boasted that Korean factories at the Canadia Industrial
Park, where the Friday killings took place, were handed a special favor
as a result of diplomats’ efforts. Their buildings were the only ones to
get special protection from soldiers, the statement claimed. Seeking
resolution to the strikes, Korean officials pushed their case to
dignitaries who don’t exactly put labor strikes in their portfolio: the
powerful head of Cambodia’s Counter-Terrorism Unit, who reports directly
to the prime minister, and other top military officials.
“As a practical measure, military forces and police have been
cooperating closely with us to protect Korean companies since we visited
the capital defense command headquarters with Korean businessmen to
tell them about the situation, and as a result, to prevent any arson
attempt or looting, military forces are directly guarding only Korean
companies among many factories in the Canadia complex,” read the
statement, discretely posted on an official Facebook page that is not widely viewed (see screenshot at the bottom of this article).
Another statement added that, since December 27, Korean officials
have appealed in a letter to Prime Minister Hun Sen, the country’s
strongman for nearly three decades. Unable to meet directly with the
dictator, the embassy held talks with members of his cabal: Om Yienteng,
chairman of the government’s human rights committee, Ouch Boritth, one
of many “secretaries of state” in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and
at least four other top officials.
Not everyone agrees with the embassy’s version of events. Yakjin, the
garment maker,insists that military police arrived in the spur of the
moment owing to protest violence on Thursday. The clear-out, the company
says, wasn’t planned. “People, and not just the labor union, gathered
and tried to literally push into the factory,” said Kong Sokunthea, an
administrative officer at the center. “There is a military unit behind
the factory, and a worker [inside the factory] knew a soldier, so we
asked the military to step up.”
“The military came in front of the factory door and tried to convince
the workers to return, but they declined, so the military got a few
people. The government’s order was also the reason why the military was
able to subjugate the strike in such a fierce manner,” she said.
She denied that Yakjin had been in cahoots with the Korean government, and was unaware of any Korean meetings with the military.
A representative from Yakjin’s head office in Seoul hung up on GlobalPost when asked about possible government involvement.
Government officials and industry representatives interviewed by
GlobalPost, too, could not confirm that any discussions took place
between Korean and Cambodian officials. “I don’t know about any meeting
between the higher-ups, but there could be a request or suggestion from
the businessmen as it is the economic zone…they must have requested we
help maintain security and protect their interests and properties,” said
Kheng Tito, a spokesman for the military police.
Even if there was Korea-Cambodia engagement, “I don't think private
sector had any authority to order the military to take action,” said Ken
Loo, secretary general of the Garment Manufacturers Association of
Cambodia (GMAC), a membership body of garment companies.
On Tuesday, GMAC dismissed
the five deaths as “collateral damage.” The group complained that weeks
of labor unrest will cost the industry $200 million, the Cambodia Daily
reported.
Among Cambodian soldiers at the scene of a demonstration, GlobalPost
also identified an individual bearing a South Korean flag emblem on his
army fatigues. The individual, who has not been identified, was captured
in a video of the demonstration aftermath posted on Facebook on Thursday (he appears at the one-minute mark; screenshot below). His identity could not be verified.
Screenshot of Korean flag emblem on fatigues, foreground left (from Facebook video).
Government officials denied the individual had any connection to the
Cambodian or Korean militaries. “He could be the company’s security
guard,” said Kheng, although he appears to be wearing a military
uniform. Phay Siphan, a spokesman for the Council of Ministers, told
GlobalPost:
“The Cambodian military unit does not have Korean flag
bearers. What you saw could be a private individual and not a unit from
Korea.”
But others weren’t so certain. Over the past decade, the South Korean
military has dispatched a handful of officers to advise the Royal
Cambodian Armed Forces, said one Korean scholar of Cambodia who asked
not to be named.
And South Korea is a known patron of the prime minister’s bodyguard
unit, Brigade 70, despite reports of human rights abuses — including the
shooting last week.
In 2011, for instance, Seoul helped fund a $28 million tank storage
facility run by the brigade. But human rights groups accuse the unit of
numerous abuses, including a 1997 grenade attack at an opposition rally
that wounded an American aid worker and invited an FBI investigation.
Say Mony contributed reporting from Phnom Penh. Park Jeong-min contributed reporting from Seoul.
Statement posted by the Korean Embassy on the Cambodian garment strike crackdown.
Damned you, you freaking Korea!!!
ReplyDelete