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Workers Sue Wal-Mart Over Sweatshop Conditions
Dear friends,
Please find below, for your information, news about a lawsuit filed
by workers against Wal-Mart.
Kind regards,
Marieke
Clean Clothes Campaign
Cource:
International Labor Rights Fund
www.laborrights.org
Sweatshop Workers on Four Continents Sue Wal-Mart in California
Court
Press Release
September 13, 2005
new economy communications
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Ira Arlook
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2005 (202) 721-0111; 258-5437
Download
the complaint
Workers from California, China, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Nicaragua &
Swaziland Denied Basic Rights
MASSIVE, SYSTEMATIC WAGE AND HOUR VIOLATIONS
Wal-Mart workers on four continents sued the giant retailer today in
California Superior Court in Los Angeles. They maintain that Wal-Mart
failed to meet its contractual duty to ensure that its suppliers pay
basic wages due; forced them to work excessive hours seven days a week
with no time off for holidays; obstructed their attempts to form a union;
and, made false and misleading statements to the American public about
the companys labor and human rights practices.
The workers are represented by Terry Collingsworth, executive director
of the Washington, DC-based International Labor Rights Fund, and Los
Angeles area co-counsels Dan Stormer of Hadsell and Stormer, and Paul
Hoffman of Schonbrun, DeSimone, Seplow, Harris & Hoffman. This legal
team recently represented Burmese plaintiffs who sued Los Angeles-based
Unocal corporation for using forced labor during the construction of
a natural gas pipeline in Burma. The suit was settled earlier this year
when the Burmese plaintiffs accepted a cash offer from the company that
Business Week estimated to be in the vicinity of $30 million.
Wal-Mart maintains a Supplier Standards Agreement with its foreign
suppliers that incorporates adherence to its corporate code of conduct
as a direct condition of supplying products to Wal-Mart. By incorporating
the code of conduct into the supply agreement, it creates a contractual
obligation enforceable by the workers supplying to Wal-Mart, who are
the intended beneficiaries of the codes worker rights provisions.
Wal-Mart has consumer outlets throughout the United States, and sells
light manufactured goods that are manufactured in thousands of factories
around the world. Plaintiffs are class representatives for workers employed
in Wal-Marts supplier factories, including factories located in
Swaziland, Nicaragua, mainland China, Indonesia and Bangladesh who were
denied their basic minimum wage, forced to work overtime, and in certain
cases denied the right to organize. For these workers, this lawsuit
represents one of the few viable ways in which these violations can
be addressed, especially given the lack of enforceable mechanisms in
their home countries.
The other class of Plaintiffs will be employees of California businesses
which have been harmed by Wal-Marts unfair labor practices, including
Wal-Marts false representations regarding compliance with its
code of conduct, and which as a result have lost business and/or a competitive
financial advantage. Within this class are also trade unions members
who were forced to make wage and benefit concessions to allow their
employers to try to compete with Wal-Mart. This class of plaintiffs
will bring their claim under Californias Unfair Business Practices
Act § 17200.
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