But the effort strikes him as too little too late, since it comes after workers were injured, arrested and killed during the January strike, he said, adding that a wage raise is needed immediately.
Date set for wage-reform talks
The first phase of promised minimum wage reform is set to begin
later this month, when representatives of workers, employers and the
government will hash out ideas on how to set a base salary for the
garment sector, in a move meant to avert labour unrest like the kind
that rattled the country in January.
In an announcement released on Friday, the Ministry of Labour invited
members of its Labour Advisory Committee, union representatives and the
Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia (GMAC) to participate in
initial talks scheduled for April 24 and 25.
“In essence, this discussion isn’t something about the figure of the
minimum wage, but rather focusing on the principles to be used to set
the minimum wage,” said Tun Sophorn, national project director for the
International Labour Organization (ILO), which the government
commissioned as technical advisers.
Labour Minister Ith Sam Heng enlisted the ILO’s help to put in place a
minimum wage-setting mechanism after a nationwide garment worker strike
erupted following a ministry decision to raise the figure for the
garment sector from $80 (including a $5 health bonus) to $100, rather
than the $160 unions demanded.
The strike ended after police cracked down on demonstrations on January 2 and 3, killing at least four and arresting 23.
After the groups come up with a wage-setting formula amenable to all,
Sophorn said, an independent researcher will in May study how the
agreed-upon formula can best be implemented. By the year’s third
quarter, all parties will consult and sign off on a specific amount.
Getting all stakeholders together for a conversation on minimum wage
reform and setting a specific road map for achieving it is a step in the
right direction, Pav Sina, president of the Collective Union of
Movement of Workers, said.
But the effort strikes him as too little too late, since it comes
after workers were injured, arrested and killed during the January
strike, he said, adding that a wage raise is needed immediately.
“I think the Ministry of Labour intends on dragging out the
discussion on minimum wage,” he said. “It will take them until the end
of the year, which is the opposite of our desire.”
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