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Press release of the Clean Clothes Campaign in Switzerland and
the companies Migros, Switcher and Veillon
19th of March 2003
WORKING CONDITIONS:
RESULTS OF THE MONITORING OF CHINESE GARMENTS SUPPLIERS
The pilot project on independent monitoring set up by the Clean
Clothes Campaign (CCC) and by Migros, Switcher and Veillon makes
today public the reports on its follow-up visits to Chinese suppliers
of these three Swiss companies at http://www.cleanclothes.ch/d/Reports.htm
Reminder: the pilot project on independent monitoring was set
up in April 2000 in the wake of a major campaign launched by the
Swiss CCC. The campaign called on all garments retailers to respect
the rights of workers in all places where their clothes are produced.
Three Swiss companies reacted positively to the campaign by adopting
a full Code of Conduct. They also accepted that the working conditions
at some of their suppliers in India and China be independently
monitored. In December 2002, the pilot project made public the
reports on its follow-up visits to some Indian factories supplying
Migros, Switcher and Veillon. As for the reports on the Chinese
suppliers, they are made public today.
Two Chinese suppliers took part in this experiment on independent
monitoring: a supplier to Switcher located near Shanghai and factory
supplying both Migros and Veillon, and located in Dongguan, Guangdong
Province (near Hong Kong). A first visit took place in April and
August 2002 respectively. The visits were carried out under the
responsibility of the project director, Isabelle Scherer, who
was assisted by two free-lance social auditors. Before each visit,
a Hong Kong-based NGO and social researchers interviewed the workers.
The reports sum up the results of the follow-up visits, analyse
the extent to which the suppliers respect the rights enshrined
in the codes adopted by the three companies and assess the progress
made since the first visit.
The results of these visits are varied and have demonstrated
the relevance of the methodology adopted by the pilot project,
namely: a first visit to check the working conditions, then a
corrective action plan developed out of the recommendations made
by the project director, and finally a follow-up visit to assess
the implementation of these recommendations. This approach has
showed that even in the Chinese context, where breaches of labour
laws are frequent, notably regarding working hours and wages,
substantive improvements are still possible under certain conditions.
It should be noted also that the pilot project organized a series
of training sessions on the Code for the workers of one factory,
with the collaboration of a local NGO.
The mandate of the pilot project thus comes to an end with the
publication of these reports. CCC is currently discussing with
the three companies how this experience should be followed up./ENDS
More informations :
Coordinators of CCC in Switzerland :
Isabelle Chaudet
(Tel. 021 620 03 07 ; fax : 021 620 03 00 ; e-mail info@cleanclothes.ch)
or: Stefan Indermühle
(Tel. 01 277 70 10 ; fax 01 277 70 01 ; e-mail :ccc@evb.ch).
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