Unions threaten mass demo
The garment industry will devolve into chaos if any of the six
labour union presidents summonsed to court for questioning are taken
into custody, independent union leaders said.
Several of the six major union leaders called to Phnom Penh Municipal
Court for questioning for alleged crimes connected to violent protests
in early January said yesterday they will call for members to hold
massive demonstrations across the Kingdom if the cases move forward.
“We will encourage the workers to push, and support us if we are
arrested because we are always protecting them,” said Yang Sophorn,
president of Cambodian Alliance Trade Union.
Phnom Penh Municipal investigative judge Chea Sokheang last week told the Post
that he sent summonses for the leaders of six independent labour unions
who encouraged a 10-day nationwide strike in the garment sector after
the Ministry of Labour set the industry’s minimum wage at $100, rather
than the $160 unions pushed.
Sophorn, Chea Mony, Ath Thorn, Rong Chhun, Pav Sina and Morm Nhim
will be called for questioning on charges of intentional violence with
aggravating circumstances. If convicted, each could face up to five
years in prison.
Collective Union of Movement of Workers president Pav Sina, who is scheduled for questioning on Friday, said his arrest would disrupt a large number of factories.
“My activists will instruct our members in more than 40 factories, in
Phnom Penh and the provinces, to suspend work, and demand my release,”
Sina said yesterday.
Arrests of the unionists could scare away international brands that
source from Cambodia, said Dave Welsh, country director of labour rights
group Solidarity Center.
“It’s completely counterproductive,” Welsh said, pointing out that
the questioning coincides with negotiations for next year’s minimum
wage. “It sends the wrong message to people who are looking at
Cambodia’s garment industry.”
Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia secretary general Ken
Loo said it’s too early to predict any possible arrests. But if they do,
workers have the right to protest.
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