All quiet on the garment front
Analysis
A hush has fallen over Cambodia’s garment sector. With the exception
of the occasional strike, life on the factory floor has in ways returned
to how it was before the mass strike that turned deadly in January.
“The situation is much quieter than after the violence,” says Ear
Chheng Lim, 26, a worker at the Canadia Industrial Park, near where
security forces shot dead at least four people on January 3. “I have not
seen any police or military police along Veng Sreng [Boulevard] this
month. The situation outside the factory, actually, is normal.”
Except it isn’t. The wage issue, which led to the deadly violence,
remains unresolved, results of a government investigation into the fatal
shootings remain unreleased and calls continue for 21 unionists and
workers arrested to be freed.
“All this could be resolved overnight,” said Dave Welsh, whose
labour-rights organisation Solidarity Center has been meeting with the
government regularly. “Momentum continues in terms of fairly massive
pressure and attention … but there’s been no movement.”
Yang Sophorn, president of the Cambodian Alliance of Trade Unions,
said Ministry of Labour officials had met only twice with unions since
January’s violence.
“We met … but did not get any kind of result,” she said, adding that
unions had sought further meetings, but received no response. “I expect
there will be another meeting once the ILO and other institutes
intervene.”
Moeun Tola, head of the labour program at the Community Legal Education Center, is not so sure.
“The [government] does not want to give credibility to the unions,”
he said. “The main problem is that [Labour Minister Ith] Sam Heng has
not informed or responded to unions that are protesting.”
Welsh said that in the face of the “wrong type of [global] media in
terms of Cambodia’s reputation”, and despite diplomatic pressure behind
closed doors, the government had launched an assault on unions and
continued using government forces to “scare” workers.
“There’s been no movement on the imprisoned workers and unionists.
There has been no movement on the minimum wage. A group has been
commissioned … but there was a similar group created [last year].”
Ministry of Labour spokesman Heng Sour said the government was
waiting for the ILO to appoint a technical expert to help it assess
wages.
“After [that], we will set up a time, which we expect will be in
April. I do hope that after we receive that … we will be able to broaden
the meetings to include unions.”
As well as feeling left out of wage talks, CATU’s Sophorn said,
unions had been ignored when it came to the shooting investigation.
“The Ministry of Labour did not invite or summons any unions for questioning over the protests or violence,” she said.
Brands that met with the government in Phnom Penh last month have
since expressed concern over its proposed trade union law. Welsh said
they needed to talk even tougher.
“They allude to the fact that their continued source is based on this
[violence] not happening again … but three months in, there hasn’t been
much resolution,” he said. “They have leverage.”
Since the shootings, the Garment Manufacturers Association in
Cambodia has publicly challenged the “fundamental” right to strike,
while employers and business groups have called on Prime Minister Hun
Sen to reconsider what Cambodia gets out of being a signatory to the
ILO’s Convention 87 on freedom of association.
But Ken Loo, secretary-general of GMAC, said his association was not being confrontational.
“We have never stopped speaking to the unions,” he said. Loo added,
however, that GMAC had no intention of talking more about the minimum
wage, which stands at $100.
“There is no room for further negotiations.”
But Pav Sina, president of the Collective Union of Movement of
Workers, said unions were waiting for promised talks with the ministry.
“If the issue has not been resolved by Khmer New Year, our unions and
associations that have members at about 200 factories will strike
again,” he said.
While life might seem normal again back at her factory, Chheng Lim is not willing to accept that it can’t get better.
“Unionists … have distributed letters informing me we’re going to
strike after the New Year. I will join, because I still need a higher
wage,” she said.
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