The companies affected in the Tai Seng special economic zone on the Vietnamese border were Top Sport, Best Way, Towa, Kingmaker Footwear Co, Sheico (Cambodia) Co, DK Inc, Smart Tech Co and A & J Co, sources said.
The workers, who want basic salaries of $120 to $150 as well as bonuses of $15 for transport and $30 for skilled workers, were planning to converge on Svay Rieng City Hall.
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Thousand of workers take to picket lines Last Updated on 13 February 2013
Phnom Penh Post
With the anniversary of the shooting of three garment workers at
Kaoway Sports factory in Bavet town just a week away, about 5,000
workers went on strike yesterday at the Manhattan Special Economic Zone
(MSEZ), where then-city governor Chhouk Bandith allegedly opened fire
last year.
In a simultaneous protest yesterday, the entire workforce of Kandal
province’s Yung Wah Industrial garment factory complex – about 7,000
workers – blocked the road outside the shuttered Gap supplier all day to
demand their salaries, which are two months overdue.
Workers from four factories – Long Bright, Chart, and bicycle
factories Smart Tech and Best Way – protested in Svay Rieng province’s
MSEZ against low wages and other conditions.
“The factories don’t respect working conditions,” said Ros Savy, an employee of Long Bright. “They always fire workers.”
A worker involved in a strike last month had been forced to work
overtime and in isolation, he added. Long Bright could not be reached
for comment.
On February 20 last year, three women were injured after Bandith
allegedly opened fire during a protest involving about 6,000 workers.
The since-deposed governor will appear in the Court of Appeal on
February 27 for questioning over the incident, a re-opening of a case
that was originally dropped by the provincial court.
Moeun Tola, head of the labour program at the Community Legal
Education Center, said yesterday that unions and labour-rights groups
found it difficult to enter the MSEZ for discussions with workers and
factory owners.
“We’ve had no progress at all since the garment workers were shot.
We’re concerned for workers’ freedoms, because unions just can’t enter.”
Dave Welsh, American Center for International Labor Solidarity
country manager, said the government needed to provide a framework in
which to discuss a national minimum wage and regular pay rises.
“We call on the government to have something systematic in place to deal with wage increases,” he said.
In Kandal’s Takhmao town, the 7,000 workers from the twin Yung Wah I
and Yung Wah II factories blocked road 21B starting at 6:30am.
They told a similar story to the one that unfolded at Kingsland
Garment in the capital in late December: their factory had closed, and
their bosses had fled while still owing wages.
“The employer and managers of the company flew overseas in December
and collected the old merchandise to sell, but the workers were not told
anything,” worker representative Sok Phalla said. “We need our salary
for two months, and if the factory is closed, the employers have to pay
all the benefits for us.”
“I have no money to buy food,” said Soy Sokchea, who worked at Yung Wah II for more than eight years.
Employees had not been given work since the end of January, he added.
Yung Wah Industrial administrative manager Seoun Hout said yesterday that he, too, had not received his salary.
“The employer is in Singapore, and he referred everything to the
company lawyer,” he said, adding employees were waiting to hear from
that lawyer.
To contact the reporters on this story: May Titthara at
titthara.may@phnompenhpost.com, Mom Kunthear at
kunthear.mom@phnompenhpost.com
With assistance from Shane Worrell
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