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Reebok workers protest in Indonesia
By
Associated Press, 7/29/2002
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) More than a thousand Reebok workers protested
outside the American Embassy in Jakarta Monday over a cut in orders
they claimed left 5,400 workers without jobs.
It was the fifth protest this year at the U.S. Embassy staged
by workers from the factory in the central Indonesian city of
Bandung which makes shoes for Reebok, the world's second largest
athletic shoe maker.
''Reebok
are killers!'' ''Reebok are exploiters!'' the protesters chanted.
Agus Hariyadi, a protest organizer, said the Massachusetts-based
shoemaker had reneged on a promise to keep up shoe orders.
Foreign-based shoe manufacturers employ at least 300,000 workers
across the country. Most of the products are for export.
Monday's protesters work at a factory in Bandung run by PT Primarindo
Asia Infrastructure, one of several Indonesian companies making
shoes for Reebok.
Reebok
said in a statement that it recently cut or ended orders to three
factories, one in China, one in Thailand and the Bandung factory.
Reebok said the Bandung factory had the worst quality and delivery
records of any of its plants in Indonesia, and that it was too
far from the company's local engineering center.
Reebok said it had encouraged the factory to look for other buyers
last September and that the company would assist the workers ''to
ensure the factory pays affected workers appropriate severence
wages in accordance with Indonesian law.''
''The decision to terminate a business relationship with a valued
business partner is never an easy one,'' said Reebok, which said
it still employs 19,700 Indonesia workers at three factories on
the island of Java. ''Reebok regrets any hardship this decision
may cause to P.T. Primarindo factory workers and their families.''
Many U.S. manufacturers have moved their operations to Vietnam
and China, seeking to avoid social turmoil that has been part
of Indonesia's uneasy transition to democracy following the 1998
fall of ex-dictator Suharto.
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