The statement came after thousands of garment and footwear workers at three Special Economic Zones in Bavet City had staged strikes throughout this week to demand the 50 U.S. dollars that they claimed that factory owners had promised to give them when they did not join a post-New Year strike, which was organized by eight opposition-aligned trade unions in mid-April.
Cambodia's garment manufacturers calls on gov't to curb illegal strikes
Xinhua | 27 April 2014
PHNOM PENH, April 27 (Xinhua) -- The Garment Manufacturers
Associations in Cambodia (GMAC) on Sunday urged the government to curb
outlawed garment strikes that have occurred this week at Special
Economic Zones in eastern Bavet City, which are expected to continue
next week.
"GMAC is disappointed that the government and local authorities let
such illegal action happen and have no effective measures to prevent
it," GMAC said in a statement.
"GMAC envisages that this outlawed action is evolving to violence because strikers had hurled stones at factories, threatened other workers not to work, and destroyed factories' properties," it said.
It said the strikes will spread to other industrial zones if there are no preventive measures.
"We'd like to appeal to the Ministry of Labor and local authorities
to implement their roles in curbing these illegal strikes immediately in
order to ensure security and safety for investors and workers who wish
to work," the statement.
The statement also called on striking workers to return to work, or they will not be paid on striking days.
The statement came after thousands of garment and footwear workers at
three Special Economic Zones in Bavet City had staged strikes
throughout this week to demand the 50 U.S. dollars that they claimed
that factory owners had promised to give them when they did not join a
post-New Year strike, which was organized by eight opposition-aligned
trade unions in mid-April.
GMAC denied that factories had made such promise and accused the
opposition-aligned trade unions of fabricating this information after
they failed to attract workers for their post- New Year wage demanding
strike.
Officials at the Ministry of Labor could not be reached for comments on Sunday.
Pav Sina, president of the Collective Union of Movement of Workers,
one of the opposition-aligned unions, said Sunday that workers in those
zones will continue their strikes on Monday if their demand remains
unmet.
Wage dispute in the garment sector remains hot in this Southeast
Asian nation since pro-opposition trade unions, which represent about 19
percent of the total workers, are still demanding the government and
GMAC to increase the minimum wages to 160 U.S. dollars a month, but the
government said the demand is too high to afford.
The current minimum wage is 100 U.S. dollars a month.
The garment and footwear industry, the kingdom's largest foreign
exchange earner, comprises 960 factories with about 620, 000 workers.
The sector earned 5.5 billion U.S. dollars in revenues last year.
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