Thailand’s Upgrade in Human Trafficking Report Slammed as ‘Premature

Human rights lawyer Preeda Tongchumnum also lauded Thai government’s effort in tackling human trafficking but said more could be done, including ratifying the United Nations International Labor Organization convention. “Without these rights, migrant workers especially in Thailand’s biggest export industries remain vulnerable,” said Tongchumnum from the Solidarity Center office in Thailand.

Supply chains roundtable: Neha Misra

“A credible and successful governance system would ensure that ALL workers (including migrant and informal economy workers) are covered by labor and other legal protections,” said Neha Misra, Solidarity Center Senior Specialist on Migration and Human Trafficking.

Brown, Wyden Call Meeting with Administration to Press for Strong Enforcement of Anti-Slave Labor Provision

Solidarity Center Executive Director Shawna Bader-Blau was one of four representatives of the human and worker rights community at a meeting called by U.S. Sens. Sherrod Brown (D-OH) and Ron Wyden (D-OR) with members of the Administration and advocacy groups to press for strong enforcement of the senators’ amendment to end the importation of products produced with forced labor into the United States. 

Eradicating Child Labor in Supply Chains Requires Binding, Enforceable Standards

In the effort to end child labor and other abuses in supply chains, voluntary, unenforceable corporate codes of conduct are not the answer, write’s Solidarity Center Senior Asia Program Officer Sonia Mistry. “The only truly sustainable and meaningful alternatives to voluntary codes of conduct are binding and enforceable standards that employers and governments must abide by and which uphold the labor standards enshrined in the International Labor Organization’s (ILO) conventions, like the prohibition on child labor and the right of workers to form or join unions.”

Fisherman Tells Thai Court of Beer Tab that Led to Years of Slavery

The human trafficking case against nine labor brokers and the owner of a Thai fishing company is now on trial and the Solidarity Center is pushing for the case to be moved. “‘We wanted to move the case [to Bangkok] because we are worried about the safety of the victims,’ said Preeda Tongchumnum, a lawyer who works with the Solidarity Center. 

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