Media Highlights
Cambodia’s Killer Commute
Local labor law does not regulate the company-provided trucks and vans used to transport garment workers, but the vehicles are not a safe option to get to work, said Dave Welsh, Solidarity Center Cambodia country director. However, “if they don’t get into the trucks, they don’t get to work and they don’t get paid.”
Apparel Industry Profiteers Must Fund Relief for Free Trade Refugees (opinion)
In the works is a radical overhaul of labor laws, which will redefine the lives of more than six million impoverished migrant workers. “The conditions [in Malaysia] are appalling,” said the Solidarity Center’s Dave Welsh. “If even a modicum of what trade unions put forward is enacted into law, this is a huge game changer.”
In Bangladesh’s Garment Factories, Workers Face an Uphill Battle for Better Safety
The Solidarity Center reported in May that more than a dozen garment factory union leaders in Gazipur were physically attacked or threatened with violence.
Meet Pang Vanny Jailed For Wanting $2.5 More for the $100 Shirt You Wear
According to David Welsh, program director for Cambodia at the Solidarity Center, “In Cambodia there’s a complete absence of living wage… This is a race to the bottom.”
A Factory or Family Dilemma
Being placed on consecutive short-term contracts in Cambodia’s predominantly female-staffed garment sector is forcing many women to choose between a family and a factory job. Solidarity Center country director Dave Welsh said factories frequently use fixed-duration contracts to cheat women out of maternity leave.
Cambodian Garment Workers Continue to Mobilize Despite Government Repression
“Workers are protesting because they are being paid starvation wages,” says David Welsh, Solidarity Center country director. “There won’t be a solution to this problem until the brands are willing to increase the prices they pay their suppliers so that those suppliers can pay the workers decent wages.”
Haiti Raises Minimum Wage for Factory Workers, Others
The pay boost is not only less than what the Solidarity Center has outlined, but also far less than the $11.11 protesting garment workers have asked for in recent months as they forced some factories in the capital to stop production.
To Prevent Another Rana Plaza, Build Better Societies, not just Better Factories
According to research by the Solidarity Center, less than 1 percent of women in garment factories participate in worker associations in Bangladesh’s export zones.
Cambodia’s Stability is Hanging by a Thread
The Cambodian government-established commission concluded that a garment sector living wage should range between 111 and 127 euros. But the minimum wage for workers at the beginning of this year was set at only 73 euros. “The government has ignored the findings of its own commission. Because of this, the unions called for protests,” said the Solidarity Center’s David Welsh.
Cambodia Is a Deadly Political Mess that the World Completely Ignores
Increasingly, opposition protesters have found common cause with striking workers in the nation’s booming apparel sector—a $5.5 billion industry, yet one in which average monthly wages stand at only $80. “Unless workers put in pretty outrageous levels of overtime,” they in no way make a living wage, says David Welsh, Cambodia program director for the Solidarity Center labor advocacy group.
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Media Mentions is a daily digest of major media coverage of issues that affect workers, workers’ rights, and workers’ organizations overseas, discusses the impact of globalization, or mentions the work of the Solidarity Center.