Support Par Garment workers
Dear Friends,
18 Feb 2003, Please find below a request for action
in the case of 149 Thai garment factory workers who have been
left without jobs and no compensation, and salary and overtime
unpaid after their workplace was suddenly shut down in December.
Par Garment, located near Bangkok, produced garments for such
international brands as Gap, Wal-Mart, Nike, and Tommy Hilfiger.
Many of you will remember the campaign to support
the demands of workers who were dismissed from the Par Garment
factory in December 2000. Following much local and international
campaigning, the 30 union members and leaders dismissed at that
time eventually won compensation, and the five who wanted reinstatement
also won this. However, in violation of the court order, the
factory paid the five union leaders but never allowed them to
work in the factory since winning reinstatement.
Now, reports the union, the factory has decided
to file for bankruptcy, close down Par Garment and relocate
production to two other factories (which are not unionized)
in the provinces far from Bangkok, which the Par Garment owner
has a financial interest in.
The union is requesting pressure be put on the
brand label companies and the Thai Government to accept responsibility
and intervene to pressure the company to ensure that the workers
demands are met. They are demanding compensation and back pay
for the workers, and jobs for any workers who are willing to
relocate at the two other companies.
More details on this case follow below, as well
as names and addresses to write protest letters to. Please
take action on this case today!
source: TIE-Asia, February 18, 2003
'Runaway' employer at Thailand's Par Garments
Tommy Hilfiger, Gymboree, Wal-Mart, and the Gap
challenged to accept their social responsibilities to the factory
workers who produce their international brand name products
One hundred and forty nine Thai garment factory
workers have been left without jobs or compensation, with salary
and overtime unpaid after their employer 'ran away' from his
responsibilities to his workers and to his loan payments to
the Bangkok Bank in December last year (2002). The Par Garments
factory in Pathum Tanee an industrial area on the northern outskirts
of Bangkok - produced garments for international brand names
Gap, Wal-Mart, Nike, and Tommy Hilfiger.
On the morning of 18 December 2002 the workers
arrived at work to find the factory gates locked. A Bankruptcy
Court notice on the gates stated that the Par Garments factory
had been put into liquidation by the Bangkok Bank the day before.
Factory owner Apiwat Latinat Mongalat (Mr. A) had failed to
make loan repayments to the bank on time.
Following the December closure, Mr. A continues
to manufacture for the international brands at two other factories
in which he owns shares in provinces far from Bangkok.
In the weeks before the sudden closure of the
Par Garments factory the workers had been forced to work five
hours overtime each day and then for the last week given no
work to do. The workers saw that some equipment was already
being removed from the factory during this time. Although there
were rumours about the future of the factory, the owner, Mr
A, told the workers nothing.
They now believe that Mr A knew the factory would
close, and that he was removing equipment that would otherwise
have been taken by the Bangkok Bank following Mr A's failure
to honour his loan repayments.
When the factory closed the workers were not paid
for the last two and a half weeks at work including the forced
overtime to finish orders.
The 149 Par Garments workers are now challenging
the international brand name companies to pressure Mr A to pay
the salary and overtime payments owed along with providing jobs
in either of the two factories operating in the province (for
those who are willing to relocate) and compensation for those
who are unable to relocate. They believe that as the international
companies are actively benefiting from Mr A's use of low-wage
non-union workers in provincial Thailand. These companies must
accept their share of responsibility to the workers who make
their products.
Since the sudden closure of the Eden garment factory
in 1996, Thailand's labour law now provides that where employers
close their factories and fail to pay compensation the Ministry
of Labour can make compensation payment to the workers. It is
then the Ministry of Labour who sues the employer for the money
owed. The workers then receive their entitlement without having
to take perhaps long and expensive legal action. The Par Garment
union is calling upon the Ministry of Labour to pay the full
compensation owed to the workers from the compensation fund;
the Ministry can then take action to recover the money from
Mr. A. Those who have worked for more than 10 years at Par Garments
are entitled to 10 months salary as compensation for loss of
their jobs.
Many of the Par Garments workers are already over
40 years old and will find it very difficult to get another
job. The Par Garments workers recognise that the liquidators
for the Bangkok Bank now own their Pathum Thanee factory. However
their employer continues to have a financial interest in two
other factories making garments for the same international brand
names. The union is demanding that workers be given the option
of taking jobs at the two other factories that Mr. A has an
interest in.
Par Garment workers are continuing to demand their
right to compensation and held a rally at the Ministry of Labour
on 15th February 2003.
PAR GARMENT WORKERS DEMANDS:
ACTION REQUEST
Please write letters to:
Prime Minister of Thailand:
Prime Minister of Thailand
The Hon Mr Thaksin Shinawatra
Office of the Prime Minister
Pitsanuloke Rd
Bangkok 10300
Thailand
Fax: +66 22 82 8631
Labour Minister:
Minister of Labour
Mr. Suwat Lipatapallop
Fax: +66 22 45 2260
Par Garment Management:
Apiwat Latinat Mongalat
Par Garment Company Limited
9/4, Moo 3, Paholyothin Rd
Klong-nung, Klong-luang
Pathumthani
Thailand
Major Brand label buyers:
GAP
Sean Ansett
Manager, Global Partnerships
Gap
2 Folsom St.
San Francisco, CA 94105
United States
Fax: +1 415-427-6620
e-mail: sean_ansett@gap.com
TOMMY HILFIGER
Joel Horowitz
CEO and President
Tommy Hilfiger Corporation
11/F Novel Industrial Building
850-870 Lai Chi Kok Rd.,
Cheung Sha Wan
Kowloon, Hong Kong
Phone: +852-2216-0668
Fax: +852-2312-1368
GYMBOREE
Lisa M. Harper
Chairperson and CEO
Gymboree
700 Airport Blvd., Ste. 200
Burlingame, CA 94010-1912
United States
Phone: +1 650-579-0600
Fax: +1 650-696-2920
WAL-MART
H. Lee Scott
President and Chief Executive Officer,
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
702 SW Eighth St
Bentonville
AR 72716
United States
Phone: +1 479 273 4000
SOLIDARITY MESSAGES and copies of letters can
be sent to the Par Garment Union
c/o CLIST
Fax: +66 2 972 6385
E-mail: clist@loxinfo.co.th
ADDITIONAL BACKGROUND ON PAR GARMENTS
Par Garments was established on 24 February 1987
with a capital of 180 million baht. Par Garments workers established
a union in 1990.
Factory owner, Mr A, has been refusing to pay
his workers at the Pathum Thanee factory their annual bonus
every year since 1998. Each year the workers have had to sue
their employer for unpaid annual bonus. Mr A told the courts
that he had lost business and that he could not pay the bonuses.
In 1997 and 1998 the workers won their bonus payments through
the court.
The annual bonuses for 1999 and 2000 are still
before the court.
On December 2000, 30 union members were dismissed.
When the workers won an "unfair labour practice" case
against Par Garments in the Labour Court the company was required
to pay compensation to 25 of the workers who did not want to
return to Par Garments. The other five workers were ordered
by the court to be reinstated to their jobs.
However the employer refused to allow the reinstated
workers inside the factory. Instead, for two years, the five
workers would sign in and out every day at the factory gates.
Although the factory owner continued to pay the wages of the
reinstated workers, they were never again allowed to enter the
factory to their jobs.
In 2001 the workers took their unpaid bonus case
to the police. Mr A was arrested and released after payment
of bail and the matter referred by the police to the court again.
Sometimes the workers' pay would be delayed for
two or three days without explanation.
Mr. A maintains a financial interest in at least
two other garment factories in provinces outside Bangkok. The
Montini factory employs 700 workers in Korat in Ratjasima province
300kms north east of Bangkok and Par Consortium in Ubon Utijani
province employs 500 workers.
In 1992, five years after establishing Par Garments,
Mr A was involved in establishing Montini Garments in Ratjasima
province. Montini produces Walmart, Gymboree and Tommy Hilfiger
brands. Of the 60 million bath 600 million share capital, Mr
A owns 11,880 shares. His brother-in law owns 545,121 shares.
Workers at the Montini factory are paid the local
legal minimum wage of 145 baht a day (US$4). They can also receive
a further 160 200 baht (US$5 $7) a month if they do not miss
a single days work for sickness or leave. They can lose their
monthly 'bonus' if they are late for work on one day. They do
not have a union.
Workers can be forced to work overtime by the
management refusing to provide return transport to the rural
areas from which the workers travel each day to work. They can
also be required to punch out on their time cards hours before
actually finishing overtime. They then continue to work unpaid
overtime or face the risk of lay-off. Such working conditions
have lead to workers fainting on the job.