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Garment worker protests in Asia

November 12, 2013

In Bangladesh and Cambodia, garment workers demanding better pay and conditions at factories supplying global brands have clashed with police. A woman was shot dead in Phnom Penh. In Dhaka police fired rubber bullets.

Garments workers in Bangladesh are facing measurable problems in Bangladesh. After the building collapse in Savar, near Dhaka International organizations are pressuring Government to provide more legal support to Garments workers. DW/Harun Ur Rashid Swapan, Dhaka via: DW/ Arafatul Islam
Image: DW/Harun Ur Rashid Swapan

Garment workers upset over meager pay and safety flaws clashed heavily with police in the capitals of Bangladesh and Cambodia on Tuesday. Factory owners are under trade union pressure to raise wages.

In Cambodia's capital riot police stopped more than a thousand workers from a Singapore-owned factory, who were trying to march toward the home of Prime Minister Hun Sen.

A woman roadside vendor was shot dead and as many as 20 protestors were wounded by police gunfire, according to the local rights group Licadho and relatives quoted by the news agency AFP.

Kong Athith, an apparel trade union spokesman, accused police of being "very cruel."

"Why did police use live ammunition to crack down on them?," he asked, adding that Buddhist monks were among those harmed by tear gas.

Local Bangladesh media said scores of people were injured when police fired rubber bullets and tear gas as 40,000 workers protesting for a second day in the Ashulia export zone on the outskirts of Dhaka.

Police inspector Abdu Sattar said workers "threw stones" and blocked a "key highway."

The protest prompted at least 200 factories in the zone to suspend production.

Owners reject recommended pay

Last month, Bangladesh's Minimum Wage Board approved the lifting of minimum monthly wage from 3,000 taka ($38) to 5,300 taka ($67). But, manufacturers have urged the government to block implementation. The workers want $100.

The government had pledged to raise wages by November based on the recommendation from the board which comprised industry, union and government representatives.

Working conditions in Cambodia were criticized in July by the International Labor Organization (ILO), which cited fire safety deficiencies and the use of child labor. In May, the ceiling of a footwear factory collapsed, killing two people.

A typical wage in Cambodia's garment industry which employs about 650,000 workers, is about $110 a month with overtime.

Prime Minister Hun Sen said the protests could prompt garment firms to relocated to Myanmar, Laos and India, where labor is cheaper.

Bangladesh has about 4 million textile workers, mainly women, producing clothing for retail customers in Europe and the United States.

A factory building blaze in April claimed 1,100 lives. A fire last November killed 112 workers.

ipj/ng (AP, dpa, AFP)

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