HomeWhat's newSearchAbout usFrequently Asked QuestionsLinksContact
 
Urgent AppealsCampaignsNewsCompaniesPublicationsCodes of Conduct

05 Feb 2001, Nike cuts and runs from Indonesian factoriesnike worker in indonesia

Dear Friends,

A report from Indonesia, via the Jim Keady at the Living Wage Project (U.S.), and a request to contact Nike to voice your concerns on this issue. For more information, contact the Living Wage Project at: livingwages@aol.com

---------------------------------------------------------------------

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Nike Cuts and Runs
More Information - Contact Jim Keady at Living Wage Project: (917) 804-0491
No Kill Date

NIKE CUTS AND RUNS FROM INDONESIAN FACTORIES
SCAPEGOATING FORMER US SOCCER PRO AS THE CAUSE

(Michigan - February 1, 2001) Jim Keady, a former soccer professional and Director of the Living Wage Project, got disturbing news today about Nike's "cut and run tactics" in a number of the Indonesian shoe factories that he and his Project Team researched this past summer. In an e-mail communication sent to them by their Indonesian labor contacts at SISBIKUM, a Jakarta-based NGO, Keady was told the following:

On January 11, 2001, during a meeting with the board of SBPS (Serikat Buruh Pabrik Sepatu) the President Director of PT ADF (Nike's subcontracted factory), Mr. Haryanto said that Nike will decrease their orders from Indonesian factories. Up to 20% of Nike's current orders will move to Vietnam because in Vietnam the labor costs are lower than in Indonesia.

Mr. Haryanto added that before Jim Keady campaigned at the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, PT ADF received larger orders from Nike, but now, they have been significantly cut back.

We also received information from PT Pratama workers that management of PT Pratama told the same information to their workers.

The workers were given the following reasons for this current action:

  1. Nike will move their order to another country if there is continued worker unrest.
  2. The wages in Indonesia are higher than before. (The government called for an increase from 286,000RP to over 400,000RP per month for the basic minimum wage to be paid in Tangerang.)
  3. Nike will move 20% of their current Indonesian orders to Vietnam because in Vietnam the wages are lower.
  4. Nike is now redistributing their order to PT POU CHEN and PT FENG TAY (Taiwanese factories). These will now be the largest receivers of Nike's shoe orders because the wages are lower and there is less worker organizing and unrest than in Nike's Indonesian factories.

We also believe that Nike will cut their orders from 3 other factories: PT NASA, PT STARWIN and PT DOOZON. Nike's reasons are:

  1. The factory management cannot handle/ muffle the labor struggle.
  2. The labor costs are high and the quality of product is bad. (This communication was slightly edited due to some of the broken English of the labor organizers at SISBIKUM)

(MORE)

Keady, who along with Leslie Kretzu, Associate Director of the Living Wage Project, spent this past summer living in solidarity with Nike's factory workers on a $1.25 a day in Tangerang, had this to say about the recent development:

"This is an obvious strong-arm tactic on Nike's part, designed to intimidate workers and prey on their desperation. Nike is obviously scared that athletes like myself are beginning to be quite concerned about human beings that produce the products we wear. No athlete wants to wear and promote products that are made through exploitation, oppression and the undermining of human dignity. Nike has made claims that they truly care about their workers. If they care about these human beings, they should not run away from them simply because they are demanding that their basic rights be recognized and their human dignity be respected."

Kretzu commented, "This is a classic strategy of Nike's, 'divide and conquer.' It is interesting that they singled out Jim when threatening their workers. There is an International Campaign that has been focused on raising awareness about Nike's labor practices for the past 8 years. To tell the workers that 'Jim Keady campaigning at the Olympics on their behalf,' is the cause of Nike's pulling out is a cowardly and underhanded way of avoiding the real issues facing workers in Tangerang: fair wages, respecting workers' rights to organize, and having truly independent monitors."

Both Keady and Kretzu are calling on consumers, students, athletes, religious, political and community leaders to write, phone or fax Nike CEO, Phil Knight immediately, and tell him NOT to cut their orders to the aforementioned factories.

Keady concluded, "The women, men and children we lived with in Tangerang are desperate and have been exploited by Nike far too long. With the help of committed Indonesian labor leaders and the support of the international community, they have taken the initiative to fight for their basic rights that Nike has stolen from them and maintain their human dignity. All they want is to be treated like human beings and once again, Nike is using them simply as pawns in their game of power and profit. It is no surprise this situation has such striking similarities with the current situation at Nike's Kuk Dong plant in Mexico. Phil Knight should be ashamed of what his company has become."

The Living Wage Project is now in the process of launching a new group, "Nike Shareholders for Justice" that will lobby the company from the inside, bring a voice of justice for the workers, and strive to make concrete changes for the workers as opposed to the cosmetic changes Nike has made to date.

All of the efforts of the Living Wage Project are geared towards helping the workers reach their three major goals:

  1. a living wage
  2. management collectively bargaining in good faith with independent unions
  3. truly independent monitoring of the factories.

For more information about their campaign, please visit the Project's website at http://www.nikewages.org. ###

Living Wage Project
415 Fifth Avenue ~ Belmar,
NJ 07719 (917) 804-0491 ~
livingwages@aol.com

Go to the top of the pageTell a friend about this siteJoin the Urgent Action Network