Garment Worker Advocates Condemn Rise In Detentions In Cambodia
International Business Times | 13 May 2014
Reuters
Two Cambodian youths are facing 11 years in prison for throwing
rocks at police during one of the country’s recent clashes between
security forces and workers who make clothes carried by some of the
largest Western retail outlets, including major buyers like The Gap Inc.
(NYSE:GAP), Hennes & Mauritz AB (STO:HM-B) and Wal-Mart Stores Inc.
(NYSE:WMT).
“The Cambodian authorities should be prosecuting the unnecessary use
of lethal force by security forces instead of trying to convict a
misidentified young man and a teenage boy with a disability,” Brad
Abrams, Asia director of Washington D.C.-based Human Rights Watch, said
in a statement published on the group's website on Sunday.
The two youths have become the international focus of a rash of
recent violent confrontations between angry garment industry workers and
their supporters. The workers say they need to be paid higher than the
current $68 a month minimum wage and require better working conditions
and benefits. The issue echoes similar problems happening 1,800 miles to
the northwest of Phnom Penh in Bangladesh, which has been in the media
spotlight for more than a year over its dangerous garment factories.
Cambodia, where 11 labor activist have been detained over the past
month, nine of them last week, has been facing a rise in labor unrest
since November, when soldiers opened fire with machine guns on
protesters during a nationwide strike, killing a rice-selling bystander
and injuring 20 others. The 11 facing charges join at least 21
individuals who've been arrested since January, not including the two
youths facing prison.
Ath Thorn, head of a local apparel workers union, and another union
member were charged with inciting violence during a protest last month
against SL Garment Processing (Cambodia) Ltd.,
which supplies garments to companies including Banana Republic and the
Gap. A judge slapped the two with $25,000 in bail, a princely sum in a
country where the average annual income is $750.
In a separate incident, three union representatives in Kandal
province were arrested Friday amid a strike involving about 4,000
workers of Quint Major Industrial Co. Ltd.,
a maker and supplier of pants, jackets and sportswear. The walkout
occurred April 22, and recently hundreds of Quint workers have started
picketing the company facilities.
“They were protesting to demand workers receive a base wage of $160
[a month] and better working conditions,” Sok Ravuth, president of the
Free Union Federation of Khmer Labour, told The Phnom Penh Post in a report published on Tuesday.
The Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia, the main trade
group for the employers, accuses the demonstrators of violent tactics
and has posted on its website a collage of videos making its case.
In another recent incident, six union workers were detained by
authorities during a strike against Wing Star Shoes Co. Ltd. factory,
which was targeted this month because workers say the management had not
lived up to a previously agreed-upon deal for a 50 cents per day meal
subsidy and a $5 a month health care bonus.
Last year, part of the Wing Star factory roof collapsed, killing two workers. Japanese footwear company Asics Corp
(TYO:7936), which owns the factory, agreed to pay an undisclosed amount
in compensation to the families of the deceased workers and others who
were injured.
The government views these rash of strikes as subverting the public
peace and have answered with bullets. In January, soldiers opened fire
with automatic weapons into crowds of workers participating in a
national industry-wide work stoppage.
The workers have rejected the government’s call to raise the minimum
monthly wage to $95, which is less than the $160 the unions are
demanding. The U.K.-based Labour Behind the Label and the Phnom
Penh–based Community Legal Education Centre estimate that
workers need about $150 a month to cover the basic cost of living in
Cambodia. Cambodia’s garment, textile and shoe industry is dwarfed by
Bangladesh’s, but it's the primary export for the impoverished Southeast
Asian country.
It’s the lifeblood for about a half million workers -- most of whom
are women -- and the goods are supplied mainly to the United States
thanks to a most-favored nation trade status. Many workers are internal
migrants who spend about $10 to $25 traveling to and from their villages
each month.
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