Brands, gov’t, unions meet on the issues
After high-level government officials met with major apparel
brands and international labour unions yesterday, attendees and
observers said they felt positive about the government’s sincerity in
improving standards for Cambodia’s garment workers.
Minimum wage reform, trade union legislation and the status of 21
people detained since their arrests at demonstrations supporting a
national garment worker strike last month were among topics discussed at
the forum, said Stephen Benedict, director of trade union rights for
the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC), who attended.
“There was some indication of what the government intends to do over
the coming period, and there was a commitment of continuing the
discussions with the brands and the global unions,” Benedict said after
the meeting.
Government officials agreed to meet with the group again by the end
of May, according to a joint statement of 30 international brands and
unions that last month sent a letter calling for the government to
address human rights issues in the garment sector and requesting
yesterday’s sit-down.
Attendees represented the interests of all 30 signatories to the
January 17 letter sent to Prime Minister Hun Sen’s office, the joint
statement said.
When asked about the meeting, Labour Ministry spokesman Heng Sour
yesterday referred questions to Chhon, who could not be reached.
“Certainly, in recent memory, it’s hard to place when and where a
similar meeting has taken place in Cambodia,” Dave Welsh, country
director for labour rights group Solidarity Center, said. “The
participants list alone suggests a level of seriousness … and a level of
urgency.”
No comments were offered by the government when the topic of the 21
detainees – who have appealed their bail request to the Supreme Court
after the Court of Appeal denied it last week – was mentioned, Benedict
said. But they did raise their intentions to put in place a mechanism to
better determine the garment industry’s minimum wage and to put a trade
union law on the books.
The Ministry of Labour has already enlisted the International Labour
Organization (ILO) as a technical adviser for minimum wage reform and
the drafting of a union law, ILO national coordinator Tun Sophorn said.
Coalition of Cambodian Apparel Workers’ Democratic Union president
Ath Thorn also saw the meeting as a sign the government is taking labour
rights issues seriously.
“It’s possible that government, buyers and [international] trade
unions can form a strategy to start a negotiation process [with local
unions],” Thorn said.
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