Fashion

EU trade threat could make Cambodian factories worse for workers

If it fails, the EU will strike it from the Everything But Arms (EBA) trade scheme, which could trigger a chain of events that advocates fear will rob them of their strongest leverage point in the fight for improved working conditions.“We cannot depend on any authority or any procedures inside the country to protect the rights of workers,” said Sar Mora, president of the Cambodian Alliance of Trade Unions, which has about 20,000 members.คำพูดจาก สล็อตเว็บตรง

“If we don’t have the EBA, then we will no longer be able to pressure big brands and consumers in Europe over the treatment of workers.”About 700,000 people – mostly women – work in Cambodia’s garment industry, which accounts for the lion’s share of the country’s $5.8 billion worth of exports to the EU each year.Workers speak of an industry beset by forced overtime, unsafe working conditions and the obstruction of unionisation.But in recent years their plight has been pushed into the spotlight, with advocacy groups running campaigns that have forced brands to clean up supply chains in a race to retain their share of an increasingly aware consumer market.“The brands are the ones who have the power to push employers to respect the law and the rights of workers,” said At Thon, president of the Coalition of Cambodian Apparel Workers’ Democratic Union.At Thon pointed to the Better Factories Cambodia (BFC) initiative – a project of the U.N.’s International Labour Organization that since 2001 has held all exporting garment factories to a prescribed standard.“This concept has helped to push for improved work conditions and wages,” he said, adding that if Cambodia was to lose its biggest export market, the project could become redundant.Wages have risen sharply in Cambodia’s garment sector, to a minimum of $182 per month this year from $61 in 2012.But Khun Tharo, a program coordinator at the Center for Alliance of Labor and Human Rights, said union leaders were giving brands too much credit.“Sure, wages have increased, but at the same time we have seen the overloading of livelihoods – higher production targets, longer overtime – in order to achieve those wages,” he said.In 2013, Swedish clothing giant H&M pledged to pay a fair living wage to 1.6 million people working in factories it sources from around the world.In 2018, the world’s second biggest fashion retailer held a summit in Phnom Penh where executives said they were yet to deliver that promise to a single worker.“Are they really accountable, are the really committed?” Khun Tharo said of brands in general. “I don’t think soคำพูดจาก สล็อตเว็บตรง. Just like in business, they are competing with other brands to take credit and increase credibility.”

Related Posts

C&A Foundation launches ‘Fashion For Good’ initiative

Based in Amsterdam, Fashion For Good has been created with an initial grant from founding partner C&A Foundation, the sustainability-focused organisation launched by the retail chain C&A. Other…

EU lawmakers agree on tough line against tech companies

A European Parliament committee voted in favour of beefing up draft legislation to force online giants to set up Chinese walls between subsidiaries and to get merchants’ consent…

River Island makes transparency pledge

The British high street brand has joined a global effort by signing the Human Rights Watch’s Transparency Pledge. It follows in the steps of other clothing and footwear brands,…

Sephora boosts female business initiatives for 2017

The global beauty retailer has launched an application process for its ‘Sephora Accelerate’ program in the new categories of sustainability and technology. The program aims to boost the…

UK consumers serious about skincare, centre-mk report shows

It found that the average spend is almost £400 a year on skincare and, despite the many sources available for skincare advice, such magazines, social media, and online, recommendations from…