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00-03-15, Open letter to Nike
Thanks to Tim Conner and his elaborate work on the letter the final
letter was sent to Nike.
Open letter to Phil Knight (Nike CEO) from labour rights groups
concerned about Nike's labour practices - a detailed response to
Nike's claims to have reformed its labour practices.
15 March 2000
Contents:
A. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
B. THE LETTER
- Our obsession with the past
- Covering all the issues
1: New evidence of labour abuses in Nike factories.
- Compulsory overtime, excessive punishment and extreme verbal
abuse - the recent survey of 3,500 Nike Workers by the Urban Community
Mission in Jakarta
- Evading responsibility while workers cough up blood on the
production line - Nike and the Par Garment Company in Thailand
- Cancelling orders in response to worker activism? - Nike and
the PT Tainan I factory in Indonesia
- Three years later, what's changed? Nike and the PT Feng Tay
and PT Kukje factories in Indonesia
- Harassing workers who dare to organise - Nike and the Natural
Garment Factory in Cambodia
- Only disclosing the addresses of model factories? Nike and
the Hung Wah garment factory in China
- No better at home? Nike and the J.H. Design Group in Los Angeles
- Back-breaking quotas - Nike and the Savina factory in Bulgaria
- Working right through the night - Nike and the Lian Thai factory
in Thailand
2. Nike's response to the particular
cases raised in our last letter
- Nike's allegation that Vietnam Labor Watch is trying to subvert
the Vietnamese government
- The workers fired from the Sam Yang factory in Vietnam for telling
journalists about violence against workers in their factory
- Attempts to undermine Vietnam Labor Watch
- The case of Haryanto, fired from the Lintas factory in Indonesia
for handing out copies of Nike's Code of Conduct and encouraging
workers to form their own union
- Harassment, humiliation and repression of workers' right to
organise at the Formosa factory in El Salvador
- Use of Indonesian soldiers to provide "security" at
the Nikomas Factory in Indonesia
- Hong Kong Christian Industrial Committee and the Asian Monitor
Resource Centre research regarding the Sam Yang factory in Vietnam
and the Sewon factory in China
- The possibility of Jim Keady and other activists working in
Nike factories.
- Decisions by local courts.
3. Nike's response to the broad
policy concerns we raised in our last letter
- The right to freedom of association
- Excessive Forced Overtime
- Wages
- Disclosure of factory locations
- Nike and the exploitation of homeworkers in Australia
- Nike's May 1998 initiatives - Health and Safety- Nike's evening
classes and microloan programs - Nike's "Rising Tides"
program of open forums and academic research
- Independent monitoring of conditions in Nike factories - Nike's
involvement in the Fair Labor Association - Nike's involvement
in the Global Alliance for Workers and Communities.
Appendix 1
Nike in Thailand - Conditions at the Par Monthinee garment factory
in Korat
(Interview report) by Karuna Durian and Piya Pangsapa.
Appendix 2
Nike in Cambodia - Report on the Natural Garment Factory by the
Cambodian
Labor Organisation.
Appendix 3
Nike in Thailand - Conditions in the Lian Thai factory (interview
report)
by Esther de Haan
Open letter to Phil Knight (Nike CEO) from labour rights groups
concerned
about Nike's labour practices - a detailed response to Nike's claims
to
have reformed its labour practices.
15 March 2000.
A. Executive Summary
In September 1999, 45 organisations from 15 countries delivered
an open
letter to Nike's Annual Shareholders' Meeting, calling on the company
to
end labour rights abuses in its suppliers' factories. Phil Knight
(Nike's
CEO) and Dusty Kidd (Nike's Director of Labor Practices) sent replies
in
October, denying the allegations of labour abuses and outlining
Nike's
labour policies (for copies of these two letters see
<http://www.caa.org.au/campaigns/nike/exchange.htm>).
This letter is a reply from 10 of the unions and labour rights
groups:
Campaign for Labor Rights (US), Centro Nuovo Modello di Sviluppo
(Italy),
Clean Clothes Campaign (Netherlands), Fair Trade Center (Sweden),
Fairwear
(Australia), the International Textile Garment and Leather Workers
Federation, Justice. Do It Nike Coalition (US), Nicaragua Solidarity
Committee (US), NikeWatch (Australia) and the Textile, Clothing
and
Footwear Union of Australia (TCFUA). We believe that Nike's response
to
this issue has been dictated by public relations concerns rather
than a
genuine commitment to protecting workers' human rights and that
Nike has so
far deliberately avoided taking steps which would bring abusive
management
practices in its suppliers' factories to an end.
New Evidence of Nike sweatshops
Further examples of sweatshop conditions in Nike contract factories
have
come to light since our initial letter was delivered to Nike in
September.
Perhaps the most significant new evidence comes from the recent
survey of
3,500 Nike Workers by the Urban Community Mission in Jakarta. Completed
in
October 1999, this survey found that excessive compulsory overtime,
humiliating sanctions and extreme verbal abuse are still common
in Nike
contract factories in Indonesia. Examples of the verbal abuse include
the
Indonesian equivalent of phrases like "Fuck You!", "You
Whore!" and "You
Dog!". Examples of mistreatment include wage deductions, having
their ears
pulled, being pinched or slapped on the buttock, being forced to
run around
the factory yards or having to stand for hours in factory yards
in the
tropical heat (being "dried in the sun"). The report is
available on
Campaign for Labor Rights' Website at
http://www.summersault.com/~agj/clr/alerts/crueltreatmentworkingfornikeinind
onesia.html.
Labour abuses in factories producing for Nike in Bulgaria, China,
Cambodia,
Indonesia, Thailand and the USA have also recently been documented.
Each of
these cases are summarised in this letter. They demonstrate that
workers making Nike shoes and clothes:
- are still being paid at below subsistence levels for a standard
working
week,
- are commonly still being required to work well in excess of
60 hours per
week in stressful, pressured and sometimes dangerous conditions
- are commonly subject to discrimination and dismissal if they
try to form
unions.
Nike's Response to the Cases Raised in our Initial Letter Nike
denied almost every point we made in our September letter. We take
issue with these denials:
Nike's allegation that Vietnam Labor Watch is trying to subvert
the
Vietnamese government.
In January 1999 Nike Vice President Joseph Ha sent a letter to
Vietnamese
Officials falsely suggesting that Thuyen Nguyen of Vietnam Labor
Watch has
a secret agenda to overthrow the Vietnamese government. The letter
was
published in the official Vietnamese Press and since then it has
been
politically dangerous for Vietnamese citizens to pass on information
about
conditions in Nike factories to Vietnam Labor Watch. We reject Nike's
characterisation of Ha's letter as "the private correspondence
of one
employee". We call on Nike to provide evidence that the company
genuinely
tried to undo the damage the letter has done to attempts to monitor
conditions in Nike contract factories in Vietnam.
Workers fired from the Sam Yang factory in Vietnam for telling
journalists
about violence against workers in their factory.
Three workers, Ms Hong, Ms Chi and Ms Nguyen, were interviewed
about
conditions in the Sam Yang factory by US sports channel ESPN in
1998. All
three subsequently lost their jobs. They believe that this was as
punishment for telling the ESPN journalists about labour abuses
at Sam
Yang. Nike claims that Ms Hong and Ms Chi resigned voluntarily and
that an
internal investigation by Nike staff of Ms Nguyen's case has established
that she was fired fairly. Nike will not even make available the
report of
that investigation. We call on the company to reinstate these workers.
Harassment, humiliation and repression of workers' right to
organise at the
Formosa factory in El Salvador
In July 1999 the independent monitoring agency Verite was commissioned
by
Adidas, which also sources from Formosa, to investigate conditions
there.
Verite found evidence of systematic humiliation, verbal abuse and
vigorous
repression of workers' right to organise. Cases like this demonstrate
that
Nike's "comprehensive monitoring system" is an abject
failure. Nike's
letter back to us ignored our call for the company to clearly communicate
to the workers at Formosa Nike's unequivocal support for their right
to
form a union. We repeat that call.
Use of Indonesian soldiers to provide "security" at
the Nikomas Factory in
Indonesia
Members of the Indonesian army are frequently employed as "security"
in
factories in Indonesia during periods of industrial unrest to prevent
industrial action. In September 1999 a US student delegation observed
Indonesian soldiers stationed at the Nikomas factory at a time when
wage
negotiations were being conducted. Following the publicity the issue
received the soldiers were replaced by non-military security (police
and
security guards) who were playing an appropriate role. Subsequently
however, during peaceful strike action by workers at PT Nikomas,
police
from Brimob (an armed police brigade) equipped with guns entered
the
factory and together with factory security guards and hired civilians
they
threatened and provoked workers. We repeat our call for Nike to
ensure that
Indonesia's armed forces are never called in to prevent or interfere
with
peaceful industrial action.
The case of Haryanto, fired from the P.T. Lintas factory in Indonesia
for
handing out copies of Nike's Code of Conduct and encouraging workers
to
join an independent union.
This case represents Nike's only positive response to the issues
raised in
our letter. Haryanto was fired on 16 September 1998. On December
24 1999,
following a hard-fought campaign for his reinstatement, Haryanto
returned
to work at PT Lintas. This is the first time in the history of this
campaign that Nike has agreed to the reinstatement of a worker who
had been
fired for standing up for his or her rights. As such it is extremely
welcome news and we hope it signals the beginning of a change in
Nike's
approach to this issue.
Nike's Response to the Broad Policy Concerns Raised In Our Initial
Letter:
The right of workers to organise
We believe that other problems in Nike factories - physical and
verbal
abuse, unsustainably low wages, inadequate health and safety, long
working
hours - are all inextricably linked to the repression of this fundamental
freedom. If workers were able to form their own organisations and
bargain
collectively it would be far more difficult to exploit them.
Unfortunately Nike's stated commitment to protecting this right
has proved
meaningless. As far as we are aware (and we would very much like
to see
evidence indicating otherwise) only a tiny percentage of Nike's
contract
factories have democratically elected unions and the great majority
of
these are not being allowed to function properly. Our initial letter
in
September called on Nike to take a number of concrete steps to help
make it
possible for democratic workers' organisations to develop and operate
in
Nike contract factories. Nike ignored these proposals.
Excessive Forced Overtime
Despite Nike's stated commitments in this area, non-government
organisations have recently collected evidence of numerous examples
of Nike
contract factories in Indonesia, China and Thailand in which workers
are
regularly being required to work between 60 and 80 hours per week.
Wages
We reject Nike's claim that workers in its contract factories
are being
paid a fair wage. We believe that at the very least a decent wage
for a
standard 40 hour week should be adequate to provide for the basic
needs for
the worker herself and a small number of dependents and allow for
some
discretionary income and some money for saving.
Workers in Nike contract factories tell us that their wages fall
a long way
short of this. When Julia Pleites was working in the Formosa factory
in El
Salvador she could afford to buy milk for her daughter only once
every
month, even though she was working 12 hours a day and living in
one tiny
room with her daughter and her mother (who was also working). A
report on
her case is available on the National Labor Committee's website
at
http://www.nlcnet.org/nike/julia.htm.
Research by the Interfaith Centre for
Corporate Responsibility indicates that a Nike worker in Vietnam
who bought
food from the cheapest market would still have to work for more
than a day
to be able to afford to buy one kilogram of chicken and for half
a day to
buy a dozen eggs. Wages for a standard week in factories producing
Nike
sportshoes in Jakarta do not cover what the Jakarta Post (22 Feb.
2000)
says is needed to meet the subsistence needs of one worker. Indonesian
garment workers producing for Nike are paid even less.
Disclosure of factory locations
Nike has disclosed the addresses of suppliers providing clothing
bearing
the logos of ten US Universities. Although production for all US
colleges
represents less than 1% of Nike's production, this is a small step
forward.
However, when such a small percentage of suppliers is involved it
raises
concerns that Nike may be directing production for those universities
into
model factories. This letter cites a report by the Hong Kong Christian
Industrial Committee which argues that this is in fact what Nike
is doing.
We urge Nike to remove such concerns by becoming part of a monitoring
and
verification system which involves regularly releasing the addresses
of
(and levels of orders from) ALL its suppliers.
Nike and the exploitation of Homeworkers in Australia
The Code for the protection of the rights of Homeworkers has been
signed by
more than 112 companies producing apparel in Australia, including
Nike's
main competitors, Reebok and Adidas. Nike refuses to sign on the
basis that
it does not allow suppliers to use homeworkers and hence "see(s)
no value
in signing onto a standard for a system we do not use". Nike
is well aware
that other companies who have a policy against homework have freely
agreed
to sign the Code so that their policy can be independently verified.
In
contrast, Nike continues to stonewall in the face of a long-running
and
creative campaign urging the company to sign.
Nike's May 1998 Initiatives:
Nike has made much of the initiatives that CEO Phil Knight announced
to the
US National Press Club in 1998.
- Health and Safety
In that speech Knight committed to ensuring that air quality standards
in
Nike factories are within the U.S. Occupational Health and Safety
Administration (OSHA) permissible exposure limits for volatile organic
compounds. While they represent an improvement on the extraordinarily
high
levels of exposure to toxic gases which have been found in Nike
factories
in the past, vigorous corporate lobbying in the US has kept OSHA
standards
in this area extremely weak and they do not reflect the last 30
years of
research into the hazards which these gases pose. A more appropriate
standard would be the US National Institute of Occupational Safety
and
Health "Recommended Exposure Levels" and we urge Nike
to apply that
standard. We also call on Nike to put in place regular independent
monitoring of all suppliers' factories by organisations with health
and
safety expertise and to make the results of this monitoring available
to
the public.
- Nike's evening classes for workers and microloan programs for
local people:
We would like to know how much these programs cost and how that
compares
with how much it would cost to raise the wages of all Nike's suppliers'
workers by, for example, $1 a day. Given that Nike indirectly employs
more
than half a million workers, we imagine that these sort of programs
are
much cheaper for Nike than ensuring that decent wages are paid,
and no
doubt they have a great deal of value for Nike in public relations
terms.
Independent monitoring of conditions in Nike factories
Nike is describing its monitoring system, involving site visits
by Nike
staff, "independent" monitoring by PriceWaterhouseCoopers,
oversight of
this monitoring by the Fair Labor Association and factory research
by the
Global Alliance, as one of the most comprehensive of any company.
Certainly
in a public relations sense it is extremely valuable for Nike to
be able to
point to so many different programs. Unfortunately adding a number
of
inadequate programs together does not produce a credible monitoring
system.
In many countries in which Nikes are made it can be dangerous for
workers
to make criticisms of factory conditions. For this reason we have
argued
that worker interviews should be conducted anonymously, away from
the
factory premises and with the involvement of organisations committed
to
earning workers' trust.
Transparency is our other key concern. Unless information about
how a
monitoring program is conducted and what it discovers is made public
then
there is no basis on which to judge its effectiveness and no reason
to have
any confidence in it.
Phil Knight's speech in May 1998 stated that Nike was "working
hard to put
into effect" a monitoring system involving non-government organisations,
with summaries of that monitoring being made public. Almost two
years later
no reports on whether labour standards are being respected in Nike's
suppliers' factories have been forthcoming, summaries or otherwise.
Monitoring by PriceWaterhouseCoopers
Nike claims that every contract factory is monitored once each
year by
PriceWaterhouseCoopers. We question whether an accounting firm is
an
appropriate organisation to win the trust of workers in order to
discover
what is happening in a factory. In our meetings with workers, those
making
Nike apparel usually know nothing about any monitoring (or any code
of
conduct). Workers in shoe factories generally report that "men
in suits
from America" have visited. Before they arrive factory managers
identify
which workers will be allowed to speak to them and what they will
be
allowed to say. Workers know that anyone who varies from that script
will
be dismissed.
Nike's involvement in the Fair Labor Association (FLA)
Under the FLA agreement Nike itself will be able to choose which
(FLA
accredited) organisation will assess Nike's monitoring program.
We do not
believe that an organisation selected and paid for by Nike can be
regarded
as independent. Only 10% of Nike's factories will be subject to
this sort
of "independent" assessment each year and Nike will have
considerable say
over which factories are visited and when. The public will not even
be told
which factories have been monitored, let alone be allowed to see
the
individual monitoring reports.
Nike's involvement in the Global Alliance for Workers and Communities
The "Global Alliance for Workers and Communities" is a
partnership between
Nike, the World Bank and the International Youth Foundation. The
Alliance
will not report on whether any particular standards are being met
in Nike
contract factories. It provides Nike with the public relations credibility
of "monitoring" without having to protect workers human
rights.
Once again there is a complete lack of transparency. No information
has
been released regarding which factories are being "monitored",
what
questions workers are being asked, what workers have said in response,
or
what changes their comments will lead to. Without this information
it is
impossible for anyone to either properly assess the Alliance's approach
or
to conduct independent research regarding what it has achieved in
particular factories.
We again call on Nike to put in place a credible, independent,
rigorous and
publicly accountable system for checking labour standards, involving
individuals and organisations committed to earning workers' trust.
Until
workers producing Nike products are allowed the freedom to tell
the world
about the conditions they are working under and the right to join
together
in unions and negotiate for their own welfare, Nike's suppliers'
factories
will remain sweatshops and Nike will continue to attract the condemnation
of the international human rights community.
Open letter to Phil Knight (Nike CEO) from labour rights groups
concerned
about Nike's labour practices - a detailed response to Nike's claims
to
have reformed its labour practices.
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