Thursday, 07 June 2012
Shane Worrell and Chhay Channyda
Phnom Penh Post
The garment industry could be close to renewing an industrial relations
memorandum of understanding, but an independent union believes it is
being edged out of negotiations because it opposes the use of short-term
and fixed-duration contracts.
Ath Thorn, president of the Cambodian Labour Confederation, said yesterday the Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia was trying to exclude one of his unions, the Coalition of Cambodian Apparel Workers’ Democratic Union (C.CAWDU), from discussions.
“Recently,
when we suggested signing a new MoU, employers suggested [articles]
that talk about ‘short-term contracts’,” he said. “Because C.CAWDU has
expressed it is against these contracts, GMAC is upset with us.”
The
MoU, which GMAC and unions groups including the CLC signed in September
2010, included agreements that parties would support collective
bargaining and examine the use of short-term and fixed-term contracts,
which Ath claims are being used by “70 to 80 per cent of employers” and
lead to workers losing benefits.
It also outlined conditions that must be followed before a strike could be called.
The MoU has been up for termination or re-negotiation since October, but neither has happened and it is essentially inactive.
GMAC
and C.CAWDU have been in dispute in recent months over strikes at
factories such as the capital’s SL Garment Processing, which supplies
Levi’s and Gap.
“Whatever GMAC or employers think about C.CAWDU,
we still want to sign an MoU and implement it together, because we are
partners,” Ath Thorn said.
“If C.CAWDU is not in the MoU, many international union confederations will not recognise [the MoU].”
Moeun
Tola, head of Community Legal Education Center’s labour project, said
C.CAWDU’s exclusion would result in an MoU that does not represent
workers.
“It will only stand for the employers’ side. It will be a
serious intimidation of freedom of association [and] a symbol to the
other unions telling them not to be active,” he said.
“The problem is GMAC wants to include a new clause . . . about fixed-duration short-term contracts,” he said.
Dave Welsh, country director of the American Center for International Labor Solidarity, said negotiations to renew the MoU now look possible for July.
“Everyone
including C.CAWDU wants to be part of it,” he said. “The ILO
[International Labour Organisation] is interested in getting it back on
track.”
The MoU had provided more structure to the industry,
including through use of the Arbitration Council and more scope to
bargain, he added.
GMAC, however, was refusing to include C.CAWDU in MoU negotiations, Welsh said.
“GMAC is intimating it wants to sign an industry-wide agreement … with government-aligned unions.”
According
to a 2011 report on trade unions by Melisa R Serrano, Edlira Xhafa and
Veasna Nuon, a lack of independent bargaining remains an issue.
“Using
their connection with the aligned unions (those supporting the dominant
political party), the government does not have to commit to real
bargaining, as it uses these unions to neutralise the position of
independent unions,” the report states.
GMAC secretary-general Ken Loo said he was less interested in unions’ political alignments than whether they followed the law.
“We
don’t care if you’re with the ruling party, as long as you’re still
doing your job as a trade union,” he said, adding C.CAWDU had deceived
its members in recent strikes at SL.
Loo said GMAC would sue C.CAWDU for accusing it of being behind violence at SL.
C.CAWDU,
however, could still be involved in MoU discussions – but only if
GMAC’s union group of choice, the newly formed Cambodian Council of
National Unions, invited it to, Loo said.
“We meet with CCNU very
soon. As early as next week,” he said. “[It] has 62 unions and
confederations, the most representative union [group] for the industry.
It easily accounts for three quarters of the industry.”
Loo
denied GMAC was pushing for increased use of temporary contracts, but
said it was only trying to get a “final, definitive interpretation” of
the law because the Arbitration Council and the Ministry of Labour had
different interpretations.
Kim Chansamnang, deputy secretary-general of CCNU, said his organisation was independent.
“We work with relevant institutions for the interest of the workers.”
He did not say whether C.CAWDU would be invited to join discussions.
The ILO did not respond to the Post’s request for comment.
To contact the reporters on this story: Shane Worrell at shane.worrell@phnompenhpost.comChhay Channyda at channyda.chhay@phnompenhpost.com
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