PHNOM PENH |
Wed May 29, 2013
(Reuters) - About 3,500 workers
protested on Wednesday at a factory in Cambodia that makes clothing for
U.S. sportswear company Nike, refusing to give up their campaign for higher pay despite a crackdown by police this week.
At least 23 people were injured on Monday when police with riot gear and stun batons were deployed to disperse about 3,000 workers, most of them women, who had blocked a road outside the factory owned by Sabrina (Cambodia) Garment Manufacturing in Kampong Speu province, west of the capital, Phnom Penh.
At least 23 people were injured on Monday when police with riot gear and stun batons were deployed to disperse about 3,000 workers, most of them women, who had blocked a road outside the factory owned by Sabrina (Cambodia) Garment Manufacturing in Kampong Speu province, west of the capital, Phnom Penh.
One
woman who was two months pregnant lost her child after military police
pushed her to the ground, according to a trade union representative.
The
workers walked out on strike on May 21. Sun Vanny, president of the
Free Trade Union (FTU) at Sabrina, said about 4,000 workers were
expected to join the protest on Thursday.
"We
will continue the strike to demand what they want," Vanny said, adding
that union representatives had been invited for talks on Wednesday but
no agreement had been reached.
"We
want to know why violence was used against the woman and workers, we
want to know who hired these officers to come," he added, referring to
Monday's clash.
A Nike
spokeswoman in the United States told Reuters by email on Monday that
the company was "concerned" about the allegations that workers had been
hurt and was investigating. Nike requires contract manufacturers to
respect employees' rights to freedom of association, the spokeswoman
added
Hong Luy, chief of
administration for Sabrina (Cambodia) Garment Manufacturing, said the
company could not afford to raise workers' pay. She said workers made up
to $102 a month and the strike had forced the factory to shut down
until Friday.
Kheng Tito, spokesman
for military police, who were deployed on Monday, denied that his men
had used violence. He said some policemen had been hurt by workers
throwing stones and he denied that any women had lost a baby.
Many
Western brands, attracted by cheap labor, have turned to Asia to get
their garments made at a cost that will make them attractive to
customers in the troubled economies of Europe and North America looking
for discounted clothing.
A series of deadly incidents at factories in Bangladesh, the world's biggest clothing exporter after China,
including the collapse of a building last month that killed more than
1,000 people, has focused the world's attention on safety standards.
Strikes
over pay and working conditions have become common in Cambodia, where
garments accounted for 75 percent of total exports of $5.22 billion in
2011, according to the International Monetary Fund.
This month, two people were killed at a factory producing running shoes for Asics when part of a warehouse fell in on them.
(Reporting by Prak Chan Thul; Writing by Amy Sawitta Lefevre; Editing by Alan Raybould and Robert Birsel)
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