Police officials attempt to make their way through a protest by workers against Universal Apparel Cambodia yesterday in Phnom Penh. Hong Menea |
Reps suspended after garment workers go on strike over voting day pay cut
Phnom Penh Post | 8 June 2017
Ten union representatives were yesterday suspended from the Southland
garment factory in Phnom Penh’s Por Sen Chey district after more than a
thousand workers went on strike to protest the factory’s decisions
about time taken off for voting in Sunday’s commune elections.
The workers said they needed both Saturday and Monday off to travel
and vote in far-flung provinces, such as Battambang and Banteay
Meanchey, but the request had been denied.
Seng Sothy, 32, said it took her several hours to return to her
Kampong Thom village to vote as traffic had been worse than normal due
to the many others doing the same. “I spent almost a whole day to reach
my village, so it’s impossible to come back the same day,” she said.
The National Election Committee, unions and both major parties had
urged employers to give their staff adequate time off to vote, but no
official directive was issued, and some argued that workers had been
allowed to enrol to vote near their workplace rather than their
hometown.
Southland employees had asked the factory to give them Saturday off
in exchange for them working on the June 18 public holiday for the Queen
Mother’s Birthday – a deal that the factory and the government-backed
Cambodian Union Federation agreed on.
Yet the workers demanded that they have Monday off work too and still
receive half their daily salary of around $7 for that day, whereas the
factory insisted that workers who did not return that day would have the
day taken out of their annual leave – to the chagrin of workers who
were concerned that could impact their attendance bonus and yearly
salary.
Out of the factory’s almost 2,000 employees, about 1,500 went on
strike to protest the factory’s directive. In response, the factory then
suspended 10 union leaders from the independent Collective Union
Movement of Workers (CUMW), and another worker.
“For those who do not resume work on June 7, the factory will deduct
the daily salary and all attendance bonuses, and will count it as
absence without permission,” read an announcement pasted to the factory
gate yesterday.
Lahn Phirum, a local CUMW representative, said the factory was taking
advantage of the strike to suspend unionists and said workers had
protested of their own volition.
“The factory tries again and again to claim [the protest is] linked
with CUMW but the reality is that the factory just didn’t agree with the
workers’ request,” Phirum said. “The factory decided to suspend 10
union’s representatives for seven months and say we’ve convinced workers
to protest.”
Multiple attempts to reach Southland’s owners were unsuccessful yesterday.
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