Cambodia's Caltex gas station workers on strike
The New Zealand Herald / AP | May 13, 2014
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) Workers at U.S.-owned Caltex gas
stations in Cambodia went on strike Monday to demand higher wages and
better working conditions.
A strike leader, Sar Mora, said at
least 250 Cambodian employees halted work, forcing at least 17 of the
country's 26 Caltex stations to suspend operations.
Sar Mora said workers were demanding a minimum wage of $160 a month, up from the current pay scale of $100-$130. They are also demanding a one-month annual bonus, an annual party and day care facilities for children.
Chanlek
Than, a spokeswoman for Chevron Corp., the owner of Caltex, said it is
working with "local authorities and union representatives" to resolve
the dispute.
"We are disappointed that our unionized service
station colleagues have taken the drastic action to stop work instead of
following legal processes to resolve the matter that would have enabled
us to continue the supply of fuel products and minimize inconvenience
to the public," she said in an emailed reply to a query.
Rising expectations among Cambodia's industrial and
service workers have fueled labor unrest, with laborers in the country's
massive textile sector staging strikes and demonstrations late last
year and in January for a higher minimum wage and loosely linking
themselves with the political opposition.
Caltex is considered a premium brand in Cambodia compared to local competitors, whose prices are lower.
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