Kate Middleton is being urged to press her favorite retailer Zara to stop exploiting the women making its high street fashion.
War on Want called on the Duchess of Cambridge to speak out as the
anti-poverty charity launched a new report which shows how western
brands are sourcing from south-east Asian factories that exploit female
migrant workers.
Young women migrants from rural areas represent almost 90 per cent of
garment workers in Cambodia, from where Zara imports many of its
clothes. But 10-hour shifts in the peak season earned just 20p an hour,
or £50-55 ($80-90) a month.
And amid Middleton’s role as a Team GB ambassador for the London
Olympics, the report identifies the Games partner Adidas among other
brands exploiting Cambodian workers. It also names three more sportswear
brands sourcing clothes from Cambodia – Nike, Puma and Reebok – besides
H&M, Gap, Marks & Spencer, Levi Strauss, Timberland and
Benetton.
Laia Blanch, international programmes officer at War on Want, said:
“Western brands promote themselves as ethical and responsible towards
the people who make their goods. But they maximise their profits and
minimise costs by exploiting migrant women workers as cheap labour. It
is high time the British government stopped this abuse.”
Nine out of ten Cambodian women interviewed for the report told how,
despite sharing a room with four or five others, they needed to cut back
on essential food in order to send any money home to their families.
Phhoung, 29, a migrant worker in the capital Phnom Penh from her
country’s central province Kampong Thom, said: “Our food is not good
enough for our health. I live with four other friends who came from the
same village as me. It is really crowded for us in the small room, but
we have no choice.”
In addition to Cambodia, the report, Restricted Rights, cites Adidas,
Nike, Reebok, Levi Strauss, Timberland and Benetton profiting from
workers forced to endure exploitative conditions in neighbouring
Thailand.
Burmese migrant women in Thailand’s border town Mae Sot received just
£1.40 (69 baht) for 10-11 hours’ toil, less than half the minimum wage.
About half of the employees interviewed in Thailand lived in
dormitories in the factory grounds, where conditions were often
overcrowded and unsanitary. Not one of the factories where the women
interviewed for this report work had a trade union.
Exploited Burmese migrant women interviewed in Malaysia worked in
electronics – supplying firms such as Dell, Samsung, Sony, Panasonic and
Hitachi – and the garment sector, which featured brands like Adidas,
Nike, Reebox, Gap, Eider UK and Levi Strauss.
Workers were so desperate for jobs that they paid recruitment
agencies up to $1,000 to find them employment – money which is then
deducted from their wages. Most of the women interviewed in Malaysia
could only afford cramped homes with many workmates – one lived with 17
others and her room barely measured three square metres.
War on Want is demanding that justice secretary Kenneth Clarke
establish a business, human rights and environment commission to protect
rights for workers in British retailers’ supply chains.
BM
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