Media Highlights
[New Age: Bangladesh] Ready-Made Garment Workers Lose $501 Million in Wages in Mar-May: Report
"Clean Clothes Campaign and Worker Rights Consortium, with contributions by Solidarity Center, conducted the research on nonpayment of wages to garment workers resulting from order cancellations by apparel brands, unpaid leave and state-sanctioned wage cuts during the...
[The Guardian] Covid Outbreak Exposes Dire Conditions at Guatemala Factory Making U.S. Brands
Over 200 Guatemalan garment workers tested positive for COVID-19, supplying for Gap, Amazon and American Eagle. Solidarity Center's Central American program director, Stephen Wishart, reports that "During COVID, the brands continued to put orders into these factories...
[News 18: India] Mission Houses in Gulf Nations Should Record Indian Workers’ Wage Grievances Before Repatriation, Says Tharoor
Neha Misra, senior migration specialist for the Solidarity Center, said lack of freedom of association for migrant workers is leading to wage theft.
[National Record] Health Care as Human Right: OTUWA Kicks Off Survey Across West Africa
The “OTUWA Health Survey,” carried out in collaboration with the Solidarity Center, is designed to gather information that will help OTUWA to support healthcare workers. It is also a prelude to a sub-regional campaign being planned by OTUWA on the theme: “Healthcare...
[National Public Radio] Jailing of Labor Activist Raises Concerns About Mexico’s Readiness for USMCA
Gladys Cisneros, country program director at the Solidarity Center in Mexico City, says under the USMCA, Mexico will have to clear a huge backlog of labor disputes. And the courts have been shut down because of the coronavirus. "It's not the most reassuring landscape,...
[PRI, The World] Advocates Worry About Trump Administration’s Human Trafficking Report
The rankings used to bring with them a risk to a country's reputation. "Reputationally it meant a lot. It was embarrassing to be on Tier 3 or the Tier 2 Watch List. And if the tier rankings don't mean anything, then that reputational pressure is gone," said the...
[Southeast Asia; On the Level podcast] COVID-19 and the Garment Industry
The garment industry tends to invest where the rule of law is weakest, where there are sizable degrees of poverty and a degree of impunity, said the Solidarity Center's David Welsh on the podcast, "On the Level with Jeff Hutton," With the advent of the pandemic,...
[The Star] Coronavirus Exposes Vulnerabilities of World’s Migrant Workers
"Migrant workers have been left aside by governments who have relied on them to do dangerous jobs that have become even more dangerous during this crisis," reports David Welsh, Solidarity Center's Southeast Asia country director.
[The Straits Times] Coronavirus Retrenchments Accelerate in Indonesia’s Textile Sector
David Welsh, Southeast Asia country director of the Solidarity Center, said: "With the enormous profit margins [brands] have enjoyed on the backs of workers in Southeast Asia, they are easily placed to sustain workers and factories over this period."
[The Straits Times] Indonesia’s Labor Laws Discourage Investment and Leave Workers Worse Off: Experts
Even so, David Welsh, country director of Southeast Asia of the Solidarity Center, a nonprofit aligned with the U.S.-based labor federation AFL-CIO, said the reforms, in the garment sector at least, risk amounting to a “race to the bottom”–slashing benefits to appease big international brands that can afford to pay. During the three months ended August–the most recent data available–Sweden’s H&M, which has manufacturing facilities in Indonesia, reported a gross profit margin of 50 percent before tax.
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Media Mentions is a daily digest of major media coverage of issues that affect workers, workers’ rights, and workers’ organizations overseas, discusses the impact of globalization, or mentions the work of the Solidarity Center.