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We are not machines"We Are Not Machines"
New report finds that Indonesian Nike and Adidas workers are paid so little they are forced to separate from their children.

07 Mar 2002, A new report was released internationally today by the Clean Clothes Campaign (Europe), Oxfam Community Aid Abroad (Australia), Oxfam Canada, , Global Exchange (USA) and the Maquila Solidarity Network (Canada). Please find Oxfam Community Aid Abroad's press release below. The report (with an executive summary) is available on our website.


Embargoed until 7 March 2002

"WE ARE NOT MACHINES"

A new report has found that Indonesian Nike and Adidas workers are paid so little they are forced to separate from their children.

The report, titled We Are Not Machines, was released today by leading aid agency, Oxfam Community Aid Abroad. It reveals that workers are living in extreme poverty, with full time wages as low as $US2 a day.

"Nike and Adidas workers who want to live with their children are going into debt to meet their families' basic needs," says Andrew Hewett, Executive Director of Oxfam Community Aid Abroad "Most are forced by their poverty to send their children to distant villages, to be cared for by relatives."

According to the report, workers depend on the extra income gained by working long hours of overtime. They have been hit hard by the US economic downturn, which has pushed down demand for sports wear, resulting in cuts in overtime in many factories.

Other findings include:

  • Workers have good reason to fear that if they join independent unions they may face dismissal, jail or physical assault.
  • Although there has been some reduction the pressures on workers, they still work in dangerous conditions, and are still shouted at when they work too slowly. Workplace dangers include respiratory illness from inhaling toxic chemicals and finger loss in cutting machines.
  • In Nike and Adidas' largest Indonesian supplier factory, women who want to claim legally mandated menstrual leave must suffer the humiliation of proving they are menstruating by pulling down their pants in front of female factory doctors.

"Nike and Adidas must ensure that wages meet workers' basic needs, ensure workers are free to form unions, and adopt an independent and transparent factory monitoring system", says Mr. Hewett. "Large corporations have a responsibility to ensure that the basic rights of workers making their products are respected".

The report's author, Tim Connor is available for interview on 61 403 339 578 or timc@sydney.caa.org.au (note time difference - Sydney is GMT +11)

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