As the London Olympic committee investigates a supplier, GlobalPost talks to workers.
By Dene-Hern Chen
Global Post
August 1, 2012
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Am Phalla sits outside the factory
gates of apparel maker Shen Zhou (Cambodia) Co. Ltd., sharing a lunch of
rice, vegetables and fried fish with coworkers.
She has been sewing clothes at Shen Zhou for a little less than a
year, but is unaware that the company, which produces Olympic
merchandise for sportswear giant Adidas, is currently under
investigation over allegations that it short changes its workers in
places like Cambodia.
The London Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games (Locog) is conducting the investigation in response to a July 14 Daily Mail article,
claiming Adidas is in violation of an agreement with Locog that
merchandisers must pay workers a sustainable living wage. Full of quotes
from Cambodian workers, the article contrasts their seemingly meager
earnings with the relatively high cost of a single Adidas Olympic
garment.
But Phalla, 33, doesn't fit the profile in the Daily Mail article.
She says she's happy with the working conditions at Shen Zhou — a rare
statement for Cambodia’s garment industry, where long hours and low pay
are the norm.
Read more: GlobalPost's complete Olympic coverage
“I have worked in many factories before, about five of them, but I like it here best,” says Phalla. “It’s good here.”
Phalla and her co-workers receive living, transportation and
attendance benefits at Shen Zhou that add up to about $30 to their
legally mandated wage of $61 per month, she explains. It may not sound
like much to the average American, but in Cambodia — one in four people
(22 percent) now living on less than $1.25 a day, according to the World Bank — the money goes further.
“If I work two more hours everyday, I get about $120 each month,” she
says, noting that factory management caps overtime at those two hours.
But previous jobs were much different, Phalla remembers: “Some factories
would force us to work until 9 pm.”
Locog isn't ready to take Phalla at her word. “We have an independent
party monitor that we work with and that we are speaking to,” Lloyd
Evans, a Locog press officer, told GlobalPost last week. “We take these
things very seriously.”
Meanwhile, Adidas spokesmen have pushed back against the allegations,
saying that workers at Shen Zhou take home an average of $130 a month —
more than double Cambodia’s minimum wage.
“We have made a commitment to Locog to fulfill their Sourcing Code, which includes ensuring our suppliers pay
the proper and legal wages. This we have done,” said William
Anderson, Adidas’ head of social and environmental affairs in Asia
Pacific, said in an email.
Read more: Cambodia prison labor concerns
Sorn Chanthou, who has worked in three other factories, said that her
monthly take-home pay at Shen Zhou often exceeds $130, depending on
overtime and productivity. She can earn more if she completes more
garments, she says.
“Sometimes when I work overtime, I can get $150 to $160 a month,”
says the 25-year-old. “I like it here more than other factories because
the work conditions are good and the pay is better.”
This sentiment from Shen Zhou’s workers is not often heard in the
country’s garment industry, which currently employs about 336,000
workers. Textile and shoe exports overseas may have surpassed $4 billion
in 2011 — dwarfing 2010’s total of $2.88 billion — but factory strikes
have doubled as well. According to figures from the International Labor
Organization (ILO), more than 36,000 workers participated in 27 strikes
between November and April, with most workers demanding increased wages
and benefits.
To stem the protests, the Cambodian government and factory owners on
July 11 agreed that workers would receive a monthly transportation or
housing benefit of $7 beginning in September, and an additional $3 in
wages if they did not miss a day of work. This is meant to supplement
the $61 minimum wage, a $5 health benefit and the $7 attendance bonus
Cambodian workers already receive.
Maeve Galvin, a consultant with ILO’s Better Factories Cambodia
program, says the Daily Mail article offered little understanding of
workers’ true wage conditions in Cambodia, calling it a story with a
“four-year cycle.”
“It doesn’t look at the context of poverty in Cambodia. It doesn’t
look at what the average Cambodian earns,” she says. “It’s better here
than in other countries. In Cambodia, the garment industry is genuinely
slowly alleviating poverty. Because of the towns the workers are coming
from [and sending money back to], they are working for 2 million other
Cambodians.”
However, Dave Welsh, country program director for the Solidarity
Center in Cambodia, an affiliate of AFL-CIO that advocates worldwide for
labor rights, says that the main point of contention lies between a
legally mandated wage and a living wage, which would provide workers
with a suitable standard of living while also allowing them to save for
the future.
Read more: Angelina Jolie's legacy in Cambodia
By continually insisting that the workers of their supplier factory
are being paid above the minimum wage, Welsh says Adidas is missing the
point.
“The Olympics is their main cash cow. The good will of the PR and the
financial benefits for them are incalculable,” he says. “Of course,
everyone must pay the minimum wage, but the onus is on a living wage.”
According to local union leaders, an appropriate living wage for a
garment worker is over $200, an amount supported by the Asia Floor Wage
Tribunal held in Cambodia in April. Welsh says that since Adidas is
drawing an $800 million profit, the brand should offer its workers a
"few hundred dollars."
“As a PR gesture and a moral gesture, they should be providing this shiny model,” he says.
Reiterating that $130 is a high wage for a Cambodian garment worker,
Kong Sang, deputy chairman of the Garment Manufacturers Association in
Cambodia, which represents the country’s shoe and textile factories,
remained doubtful that Adidas would concede on the living-wage issue.
“Whatever the brand is, no matter how big it is, they always count
every single cent,” says Kong. “If the brands are willing to pay the
factories more, the workers will get more. But the brands are concerned
about their profits too.”
Phok Dorn contributed reporting to this story.
1 comment:
We all proud to know, that the British Olympic team decided to dress the Adidas materials produced by the Khmer people.
It sound to us, that our people has done a good job and show the world, that we Khmer are able to compete with other so called developed nations.
Maybe other people are not happy and angry, because we Khmer took their show.
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