Davos
conference participants condemn rights violations
Media release from Oxfam Community Aid Abroad (Oxfam Australia)
and Berne Declaration (BD) at the Public Eye on Davos Conference
Monday January 27, 2003
Footloose Nike leaves workers rights behind
Thousands of workers in Asian factories that supply multinationals
including Nike, Adidas and Levis have been thrown into unemployment
and denied their entitled severance pay, according to Australian
development agency Oxfam Community Aid Abroad (Oxfam Australia).
These claims were made today at the Public Eye on Davos conference
in Switzerland. The conference, hosted by an international coalition
of NGOs and coordinated by the Berne Declaration, is running
parallel to the World Economic Forum in Davos. The conference
organisers are calling for binding international regulation
of corporate activities.
Joining Tim Connor of Oxfam Community Aid Abroad on a conference
panel were Yeheskiel Prabowo of the Indonesian Textile, Garment
and Leather Worker's Union (TSK) and Ida Mustari, a worker from
the PT Doson factory in Indonesia. The Doson factory closed
in September 2002 when Nike, the factory's sole customer, cut
its orders. The 7,000 workers from the factory are yet to receive
their legal entitlements. (more
info)
"We are concerned that just as free and democratic unions
are starting to emerge in Indonesia and to campaign for better
working conditions, foreign investors like Nike are reducing
their investment and moving to countries where union rights
are not respected", said Mr. Prabowo.
Last month Oxfam Community Aid Abroad met with workers from
the Bed and Bath Prestige factory, a Thai factory which supplied
companies including Nike, Adidas and Levis. In October 2002
the owner closed the factory and disappeared, owing workers
back pay and severance pay. Nike, Adidas, Levis and the other
buyers have refused to pay for workers' entitlements.
Workers in the Bed and Bath Prestige factory described working
up to 110 hours per week. Employees reported that the factory
owner made amphetamines freely available in factory drink containers
during peak times. They said that almost all workers took them,
as it was the only way they could work the hours demanded of
them.
"Transnational corporations like Nike could provide stable,
long-term, decently paid jobs", said Tim Connor, Oxfam
Community Aid Abroad's NikeWatch Coordinator.
"They could maintain investment in countries that seek
to protect workers' rights. Instead, the practice of contracting
out production by companies such as Nike, Adidas and Levis puts
factory owners in competition with each other to reduce costs,
increase flexibility and speed up production. That pressure
translates into poor working conditions."
To arrange an interview with Tim Connor of Oxfam Community
Aid Abroad, Yeheskiel Prabowo, Ida Mustari or Stefan Indermühle
of the Berne Declaration,
contact 0041 79 705 02 53 or see: www.evb.ch/nikewatch.htm
For further information, please refer to:
The Public Eye on Davos: www.evb.ch/publiceyeondavos.htm
Oxfam Community Aid Abroad: www.caa.org.au/nikewatch
For more information on the violation of workers rights at
PT Doson and at
Bed and Bath,
please see the website of the Clean Clothes Campaign
<www.cleanclothes.org/appeals.htm>
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Stefan Indermühle, Clean Clothes Campaign,
c/o Erklärung von Bern / Berne Declaration,
Postfach, CH-8031 Zürich, Switzerland,
Tel.: 0041 1 277 70 10, Fax: 0041 1 277 70 01
E-Mail: ccc@evb.ch, Web: www.cleanclothes.ch
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