Showing posts with label Garment workers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Garment workers. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

‘Sexually harassed’ workers stick to their guns

Police confront striking workers employed by Ocean Garment Co Ltd during a protest in Phnom Penh on Monday. Photograph: Vireak Mai/Phnom Penh Post

Wednesday, 22 August 2012
Claire Knox and Mom Kunthear
The Phnom Penh Post
But Ken Loo, secretary-general of the Garment Manufacturers’ Association of Cambodia, said sexual harassment was not endemic in the industry, and that it was rather a case of “friendly behaviour being misconstrued as sexual advances”.
Ocean Garment yesterday refused to meet the sole demand of thousands of striking workers to have their manager, accused of sexual harassment, sacked.

An inter-governmental ministerial committee met with union and employer representatives, but Bangladeshi-owned Ocean Garment – which supplies retail titan Gap – refused to terminate the manager accused by workers of misconduct.

More than 2,500 of the Phnom Penh factory’s 4,000-strong work force have been on strike since August 11, and the allegedly abused women yesterday announced they would be pressing criminal charges.

Worker representative Keo Kim Heang said workers were left feeling thwarted, having expected a positive outcome.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Cambodian Garment Workers Would Like You To Think Before Going To H&M




In its latest episode, Vice's Fashion Week Internationale series goes to Cambodia, where the country held its first-ever fashion week in Phnom Penh in November. Host Charlet Duboc and the Vice team go to designer runway shows, parties, boutiques that cater to the elites known as the "Khmer Riche," and meet a makeup artist who's inspired by — who else? — Madonna. But they also take an unusual step: they talk to some of Cambodia's hundreds of thousands of over-worked and under-paid garment workers. What does it mean to hold a fashion week for the wealthiest of the wealthy in a country where so much of the world's cheap clothing is made?

Duboc meets garment workers outside a factory at closing time who say that on $2 a day — the legal minimum wage — they are often unable to meet their basic living expenses. These women and girls talk about not being allowed to take bathroom breaks, and having to spend whole shifts on their feet. Duboc rides a bus home from work with a girl named Srey Thom and other garment workers, and Srey introduces her to her family. Her twin sister also works in a garment factory, and her mother says she does a job that "involves spraying air into pockets," which also exposes her to toxic airborne chemicals. And although the minimum age for factory work is 18, Srey admits she was 14 when she started. ("We were very poor and had many children," says Srey Thom's mother, apologetically.) She says many of her friends were children when they started working, too; the factories look the other way. Together, Srey's, her sister's, and her mother's wages support the eight members of their family. On the bus, some workers cover their faces — unsurprising, given Duboc also interviews a union leader who says she's been beaten by police for organizing a demonstration of 5,000 workers — but others share their stories without much hesitation. "Now it can be shown abroad how hard lives are in Cambodia," says one.

Tuesday, November 01, 2011

Cambodia seeks to uplift workers as it sets up college

The garment manufacturing sector is one of the biggest employers in Cambodia
The college hopes to provide garment workers with better career opportunities
31 October 2011
By Guy De Launey
BBC News, Phnom Penh
“It will maintain high productivity, bring better communication and ensure the labour law will be clearly communicated to the workers” - Nov Dara, Better Factories Cambodia
This is not school the way many of us would remember it. For starters, heads are not lolling on desks, willing the bell to ring and bring the agony to an end.

Instead the rows of students are bright-eyed, alert and turned out in eye-catching white-and-orange polo shirts.

They respond eagerly to the teacher's prompts and questions, occasionally breaking into good-natured laughter.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

What's Causing 'Mass Faintings' at Cambodian Factories?

Cambodian garment workers rest at a Phnom Penh hospital on July 21, 2011, after collapsing at the factory where they worked (Samrang Pring / Reuters)
Tuesday, Sep. 20, 2011
By Andrew Marshall
Time Magazine

Why are hundreds of female workers collapsing at Cambodian factories? And could it have something to do with Pokémon cartoons, World Trade Center Syndrome and the Tanganyika Laughter Epidemic of 1962?

Last week, a team of experts from the U.N.'s International Labor Organization (ILO) gathered in Phnom Penh to seek an answer to the first question. In the past three months, at least 1,200 workers at seven garment and shoe factories have reported feeling dizzy, nauseous, exhausted or short of breath, and hundreds have been briefly hospitalized. No definitive explanation has yet been given for these so-called "mass faintings." One baffled reporter described them as "unique to Cambodia."

Hardly. It's been almost 50 years since girls at a boarding school in Tanganyika (now Tanzania) were struck by an illness whose symptoms — fainting, nausea and helpless laughter — soon spread to other communities. Or consider the Pokémon Contagion in 1997, when 12,000 Japanese children experienced fits, nausea and shortness of breath after watching a television cartoon. Sufferers of World Trade Center Syndrome, meanwhile, blamed proximity to Ground Zero for coughs and other respiratory problems long after airborne contaminants posed any health threat.

Wednesday, September 07, 2011

Union calls time for voters to register

Wednesday, 07 September 2011
Kim Yuthana
The Phnom Penh Post

The Free Trade Union has asked the Minister of Labour and Vocational Training to ensure that factory management allows employees time off to return to their home towns and villages to verify that their names are registered on voters’ lists for next year’s commune elections.

FTU president Chea Mony wrote to Vong Soth on Monday, urging him to ensure that workers were given time off to fulfil their duties as citizens and vote.

They will need to verify their names are on voters’ lists, or register if they have just reached the voting age, during the time set by the National Election Committe, which ends on October15, he said.

Tuesday, August 02, 2011

Cambodian shoe factories under the spotlight

Hospitalized workers after mass fainting (Photo: The Phnom Penh Post)
August 2, 2011
ABC Radio Australia

German sportswear giant Puma has been on the back foot recently after a report the company commissioned showed a litany of abuses at one of its subcontractors in Cambodia.

The company commissioned the investigation after more than 200 workers fainted at a shoe-making factory in Phnom Penh.

Correspondent: Robert Carmichael
Speaker: Chuon Momthol, trade union leader; Catherine Vaillancourt-Laflamme, International Labour Organisation


CARMICHAEL: In April around 200 workers at a factory that makes shoes for Puma fainted and were taken to hospital. A few days ago another 49 fainted too.

The April incident drove Puma to commission an independent report from a US-based non-profit called the Fair Labor Association, and the results made for uncomfortable reading in Germany.

The subcontractor, a company called Huey Chuen, employs around 3,300 workers, and was found to have failed in dozens of areas.

Monday, August 01, 2011

Cambodian shoe factories under the spotlight

August 1, 2011
ABC Radio Australia

German sportswear giant Puma has been on the back foot recently after a report the company commissioned showed a litany of abuses at one of its subcontractors in Cambodia.

The company commissioned the investigation after more than 200 workers fainted at a shoe-making factory in Phnom Penh.

Presenter: Robert Carmichael
Speaker: Chuon Momthol, trade union leader; Catherine Vaillancourt-Laflamme, International Labour Organisation


CARMICHAEL: In April around 200 workers at a factory that makes shoes for Puma fainted and were taken to hospital. A few days ago another 49 fainted too.

The April incident drove Puma to commission an independent report from a US-based non-profit called the Fair Labor Association, and the results made for uncomfortable reading in Germany.

The subcontractor, a company called Huey Chuen, employs around 3,300 workers, and was found to have failed in dozens of areas.

For instance, deductions from employee wage packets were unclear; there was no fire safety plan; new employees received no training; the firm deducted sick days from annual leave entitlements. The list of breaches of Cambodian law is long.

All of Huey Chuen's Cambodian employees are members of the Cambodian Union Federation, whose president Chuon Momthol visited those who fell ill earlier this year.

Friday, July 29, 2011

Armed police crack down on protest

Thursday, 28 July 2011
Tep Nimol
The Phnom Penh Post

Three women were slightly injured while participating in a strike of about 500 workers outside the Zongtex Garment Factory in Phnom Penh’s Dangkor district yesterday, a union representative said yesterday.

Suos Sokha, head of the Rights and Profit Workers Federation of Trade Unions, said yesterday the workers had been protesting against the dismissal of four of their representatives without any reason last Thursday, when about 20 armed police arrived.

“The girls’ hands were scratched and they had lumps on their heads and another police officer slapped one of their backs with his hand,” he said, adding police had pushed them into a mounted umbrella.

Friday, May 20, 2011

A Brief Tour of the Cambodian Sex Industry

A brothel in Phnom Penh, Cambodia

Is buying sex a better way to help Cambodian women than buying a T-shirt?

Thursday, May 19, 2011
By Ken Silverstein
Slate (USA)

"Is this a good job?"

That had to rank as one of dumbest questions in the history of modern journalism. I'd put it to a young woman who'd just served me a drink at Zanzibar, a hostess bar in Phnom Penh whose "staff of beautiful ladies … are always on hand to serve and satisfy your every desire." Hostesses are paid to be flirty and solicitous, but I had clearly tried this one's patience.

"You know that this is not a good job," she said, with a smirk that revealed her irritation.

But in Cambodia, where the regime of former Communist Hun Sen oversees a particularly vicious form of crony capitalism, economic options are severely limited and 40 percent of the population lives on less than $1.25 a day. For young women, work in the sex industry—which includes hostess bars, karaoke bars, massage parlors, and freelance prostitution—is one of the few alternatives to work in the apparel industry, which produces 90 percent of the country's export earnings. Many women find it a preferable, if distasteful, alternative.

Tuesday, May 03, 2011

May 01, 2011: SRP MPs and garment workers demonstrat​e in front of National Assembly

May 01, 2011: 125th Anniversary Labor Day - SRP MPs and garment workers demonstrated in front of National Assembly.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_24d9QGz23Q&feature=player_embedded

Monday, April 11, 2011

Union leader blames mass fainting of garment workers on partying (sic!)

Apr 11, 2011
DPA

Phnom Penh - A trade union leader said Monday the mass fainting of workers at a factory making shoes for German sportswear giant Puma was likely due to exhaustion from pre-New Year's partying.

Cambodia's New Year holiday begins on Thursday, but many factories close early as hundreds of thousands of people visit their families in the provinces.

Chuon Momthol, president of the Cambodian Union Federation that represents all 4,000 workers at the Huey Chuen factory, said they were at the factory collecting their wages on Saturday when several collapsed. Others then started feeling faint.

'They saw three or four get sick and fall down, and then they panicked and became unconscious,' he said, adding that workers had told him their illness was not due to chemicals or contaminated water.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Garment Workers Open University: Can Education Better Factory Conditions?

Monday 28 March 2011
By Anne Elizabeth Moore
t r u t h o u t
News Analysis

(Photo: Anne Elizabeth Moore)
Bright and extremely early one Sunday morning in January, slightly more than 400 young women and a handful of young men trundled out of bed to attend class on the east side of Phnom Penh, Cambodia. (While the notion of a Christian day of rest doesn't exist in the Buddhist country, it was their day off - for some, the only one they have for weeks.) Students sat in classes, repeated lessons back to instructors, took breaks to laugh and play in the courtyard and dreamed about their futures. It looked and felt like any college campus in the world - at least, any low-income college campus. Except that these women were learning about labor law. Because - oh yeah, did I forget to mention this? - they're garment factory workers.

Over a series of consecutive Sundays, 500 textile laborers per day were invited to an experimental educational initiative of the International Labour Organization's Better Factories Cambodia, held at the National Technical Training Institute on Russian Boulevard, next door to the June Textiles Company. A full day of classes, lunch, entertainment, health services, fiscal advice, job training information and free gifts were offered to more than 2,000 workers at factories around the city, all in an effort to make laborers aware of their rights under the complex Cambodian legal system.

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Labor Leaders Threaten Protest Over Draft Law

A Cambodian garment worker speaks on a loud speaker as she leads a strike in front of a factory on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Monday, Sept. 13, 2010. (Photo: AP)
Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer
Washington, DC Friday, 25 March 2011
“In the first stage, we have had discussions with all union leaders in Cambodia, from every political spectrum, and we are all agreed and share the same concerns.”
Labor leaders say they want the Ministry of Labor to accept their recommendations to a law now being drafted to regulate union activity, threatening they will hold mass demonstrations otherwise.

“If they do not take the recommendations of the unions, there will be a big, peaceful demonstration until they change it,” said Rong Chhun, president of the Cambodian Confederation of Unions, as a guest on “Hello VOA” Thursday.

Union officials say they are opposed to the current version of the Ministry of Labor’s draft law, which they say will make it harder for unions to function and easier for factories to sue labor leaders. Proponents of the law say it will help regulate a sometimes unruly sector and important economic engine.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Women in Garment Factories Help Cambodia Out of Poverty [-Conclusion: Hun Xen does not help Cambodia out of poverty!!!]

By Marwaan Macan-Markar

PHNOM PENH, Mar 25, 2011 (IPS) - Cambodia’s rise out of poverty continues to depend on the nimble fingers of young women like Khiev Chren.

She has spent the last three years in a garment factory on the outskirts of this capital city, churning out clothing for international name brands such as Levis, Dockers and GAP. "This is my first job and I need the money to help my family in the province," the 23-year-old said, barely pausing as her fingers guided the left leg of a white trouser under the needle of her electric sewing machine.

Around her rose a hum from nearly 2,000 sewing machines, behind which sat women stitching garments from jeans to shirts, in a well-lit cavernous hall. "This is a more secure job than working in the rice fields back home," Chren admitted, alluding to the hardship of life in her rural-rice-growing province of Takeo, south of Phnom Penh.

The increasing dependence on women like Chren for this Southeast Asian country’s journey out of poverty was brought home Monday by the World Bank’s ‘East Asia and Pacific Economic Update’. "Garment exports registered a 24 percent growth in 2010 after shrinking 20 percent during the 2009 [global financial] crisis," the international financial institute revealed of the main driver of Cambodia’s fledgling export economy.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

US: Grants $5m to help overseas garment workers [including workers in Cambodia]

20 December 2010
Just-style.com

The US Department of Labor has granted more than $5.3m to the International Labor Organization (ILO) to support its global Better Work programme in the garment industries in Bangladesh, Cambodia and Vietnam.

The initiative seeks to improve labour conditions in global supply chains by monitoring conditions in export factories and publishing the results in a transparent manner. It also helps suppliers to comply with labour standards that many buyers and customers demand.

“The goal is to replicate this highly successful strategy, first developed in Cambodia ten years ago, in countries that protect their workers' rights while promoting development,” said Secretary of Labor Hilda L Solis.


Under the grant, the Better Work program will focus on compliance with labour standards in the garment and other industries in these three countries.

The project will engage the ministries of labour, factory managers, multinational buyers, employer organidations and trade unions, and provide guidance and solutions to improve compliance with labour laws in ways that increase the viability of companies, as well as the livelihoods and working conditions of workers.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

When the guns fell silent

Cambodians are still busily sewing clothing for the West. Enjoy shopping while it lasts. (Photo by: Reuters)
28.10.10
By Doron Tsur
Ha'aretz (Israel)

Social revolutions in Asia changed global manufacturing markets once, and it's happening again: No more cheap clothes for the West

Cotton prices have been soaring for months. There are a number of reasons for this. One is unusual weather patterns from the United States to Pakistan. Another is spiking demand in China, and a third is the decline of the dollar. All the above have jacked up commodity prices and triggered a flurry of speculation by hedge funds.

The increase in the price of cotton, the primary raw material of the textile industry, in turn puts pressure on clothing prices. Consumer prices are rising here and there, but so far it's been in the margins, incremental increases on certain. No big economic story there, you say.


But in fact, apparel prices demonstrate the way that long-term economic processes are affected by global demographic or geopolitical changes.

We'll begin with a quiz. By how much do you think clothing prices rose in Israel in the past 20 years, between September 1990 and last month?

Here's a hint. During that time the consumer price index tripled. In annualized terms, inflation ran at 5.5%. Also, prices rose more in the 1990s and less from 2000 onward.

But that information is misleading, because clothing and footwear prices do not behave like other categories in the CPI.

In the past 20 years, overall prices climbed by 5% a year, while clothing prices rose by just 5% in total. In other words, clothing and footwear prices dropped by nearly 70%, in real terms - which means after adjusting for inflation.

During the same period, meanwhile, the average wage rose by more than the CPI, enabling people to dramatically increase the amount of clothing they could buy each year, for the same proportion of their wage. Say you spend 10% of your annual salary on clothes. The decline in clothing prices and the rise in pay means you got more bang for the same 10% of your buck. You could get you more and more each year, and in practice, people bought and bought and bought.

When the bloodshed stops
Leaving aside designer brands, which did increase in price but which are an afterthought in the consumer basket, basic socks, shirts, underwear and the like cost the same as they did 20 years ago.

This is true throughout the world, not just in Israel. Why? Because textile manufacturing moved to the countries with the lowest labor costs, mainly in Southeast Asia. The sharp drop in manufacturing costs trickled down to the buyers.

That sharp drop in the price of clothing can be attributed to geopolitical circumstances.

In the 1970s, Cambodia and Vietnam were embroiled in what came to be known as the Second Indochina War. Cambodia's murderous Khmer Rouge regime committed horrendous crimes against humanity.

China was pretty much closed off to the world, in the grip of rigid Communist doctrine. As the regime of Mao Tse Tung faded, the government was preoccupied by political infighting.

More malls, more closets
Come the 1980s, these dramas wound down. The countries of Southeast Asia began to attract investment, and companies in the West began moving their manufacturing to them, starting with unskilled and low-skilled, labor-intensive industries such as textiles. The trend was not limited to countries that had been recently wracked by war. It included regional states from Bangladesh to Malaysia to the Philippines, intensified in the 1990s and came to a peak in the past decade.

Clothing prices began to creep up during the 1990s, but by much less than the rate of inflation. Beginning in 2000 they receded, returning to their nominal level of the 1990s.

These processes changed the face of the West and had a particularly strong impact on Israel. The decline in prices vastly increased household purchasing power. People exploited that new-found power fully, purchasing more and more items of clothing every year. More and more retail space was developed, much of it in the shopping malls being built throughout the country, the lion's share of which is taken up by shoe and clothing stores.

You could say that if the nations of Southeast Asia had remained isolated and continued to tear themselves apart, global clothing prices would have remained sky-high and the malls of the West would look completely different.

In other words, if Pol Pot, the murderous despot of the Khmer Rouge, were still alive and kicking, Azrieli's shopping mall empire would have been smaller.

A case in point is the Kiryon mall in Kiryat Bialik, owned by Melisron. Half of its stores sell shoes and clothing. What used to be on the site? The Ata textile plant. (Founded in 1934, south of the Arab village of Ata, it became an icon of the Israeli textile industry. It fell ill in the 1960s and finally succumbed, after a long battle, in 1985. )

These processes hold not only for clothing and shoes but also for furniture, toys, housewares and electrical appliances. The prices of products made in Southeast Asia, with its dirt-cheap labor costs, have barely increased in decades.

In the past 20 years, the price deflation of consumer goods was Asia's number-one export sector.

The deflation is ending
If imported goods were not behind the increase in the overall consumer price index, then what was? Everything that couldn't be imported cheaply from Asia, from energy and most food items to health care and of course housing.

This global process brought with it many benefits. The 1960s birthed the hippie movement, whose slogan "Make love, not war" helped bring America's soldiers home from Southeast Asia. Cambodia, Vietnam and Laos continued to suffer horrendous violence long after the hippies cut their hair and moved to the suburbs, but they changed too.

In the 1990s, a new movement began to flourish in the West, whose slogans were "Make money, not war" and "I shop, therefore I am." Over in Southeast Asia, peace had been restored and the rattle of gunfire was replaced by the rattle of sewing machines and automated looms. They produced en masse and the West bought it all up. Business boomed. Countless Asians found employment and consumers soaked it up.

But that deflationary period is ending. We cannot expect prices of consumer products to remain at rock-bottom. There is a limit below which wage costs will not drop, and it seems the world has reached it. From now on, China and Southeast Asia will not be exporting deflation through product prices. They will most likely be exporting inflation through raw materials. The consumption spree in the West is facing a stiff headwind.

The author is the CEO of the Psagot Compass provident fund.