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  • Fired H&H Textile Workers Call for Support!

    Port Au Prince, Haiti – Four garment workers and union organizers affiliated with Batay Ouvriye (Workers Fight) were unjustly fired from H&H Textiles factory in the Palmiers Free Zone, in the Carrefour subdivision of Port-au-Prince.

    H&H management is trying to intimidate and eliminate workers fighting for their rights to a decent wage and their right to organize.

    Now these workers are calling for support!

    Give solidarity to the workers who produce the clothing we wear.

    Here’s what you need to know and how to take action.

    Who:

    Lucitha Julessaint , Jean Louis Marie Ederse, Olga Miallard , & Ruth Joseph – H&H Textile workers and Batay Ouvriye organizers who were unjustly fired.

    H&H Textile – the Haiti subsidiary of Seoul, Korea based Yujin Apparel.  Their factory in Haiti makes mostly t-shirts, shorts, and sportswear.  Some brands include Children’s Place, Avia, and Athletic Works. You’ll find these brands in stores like Walmart and Marshall’s.

    Batay Ouvriye (Workers Fight) – a Haitian movement of autonomous textile unions and organizations of peasants, small vendors, and neighborhoods.

    SOTA – textile trade union in Port Au Prince, affiliated with Batay Ourviye.

    May 1st Federation – a federation of all textile unions throughout Haiti.

     

    What:  Report from Batay Ouvriye on what took place

    Lucitha Julessaint , an organizer with Batay Ouvriye, was fired from H&H.  Two other workers – Jean Louise Marie Ederse & Olga Miallard – intervened and protested the firing on her behalf.  They were called into a meeting, with human resources director, Etienne Bernadin at about 4:20 pm.  The meeting ended at 5:15 pm. At that time, our comrades punched out and went home. The next day when Louise Marie & Hillard reported for work, H&H management fired them, because they punched out after meeting with management, accusing them of time theft and fraud.

    The May First Union Federation-Batay Ouvriye and the SOTA secretariat met with management to discuss and to charge that the three firings were illegal based on the law and the Labor Code. There was no agreement on the firings.

    While we were making attempts to meet with the labor mediator, management fired yet another comrade, Ruth Joseph, under the pretext that she did not complete the end-of-day report on daily production quotas in a timely manner. In fact, she was transcribing her notes on official worksheets.

    We made an appeal with the labor mediator. There was mediation. Once each side presented their case, the mediator concluded clearly there was no valid justification to fire the comrades and proposed to reinstate them in their posts; the firings were not based on the law.

    On the mediator’s proposal, the H&H representative gave his guarantee that he was going to report to his boss with a view to reconsider the firings and they will give a response in three days. Since then, it’s been a month and we haven’t heard anything from them.

    In this sense, we are calling for national and international solidarity to launch a campaign to compel the H&H Textile management to reinstate all the comrades they fired illegally.

    Why:

    The fight for a higher wage in Haiti has been ongoing.  This fight, as well as the basic right to organize, is constantly met with harassment, illegal firings, and often violent repression.  Manufacturers and the brands they produce for vehemently oppose workers’ rights because they interfere with their ability to extract as much profit out of the production process as possible.  This means exploitation is required, and it takes many forms.  Setting impossible production quotas to prevent workers from receiving the minimum wage, wage theft, and unpaid overtime are a few of these methods.

    How: 

    Here’s how these workers are asking you to take action!

    Email H&H to amplify the workers’ demands.
    You can copy and paste the message below, and feel free to add your own note!

    Email contact:  Jay@yjapp.com
    cc: batay@batayouvriye.org

    To Whom it May Concern at Yujin Apparel:

    I am emailing in support of workers at your H&H factory in Haiti – Julessaint Lucitha, Jean Louis Marie Edese, Hillard Olga, & Joseph Ruth.  Right now Haitian garment workers cannot survive on the starvation wage they are paid.  These workers were unjustly fired for exercising their right to organize.

    I insist on the following:

    1. Rehire Julessaint Lucitha, Jean Louis Marie Edese, Hillard Olga, & Joseph Ruth.
    2. Respect workers’ right to organize.
    3. Pay workers 500 gourdes ($7.83).  Stop profiting from exploitation!

    In solidarity with Haitian garment workers,

    Your Name
    City, State, or Country

    #RRNsolidarity
    #RightToOrganize
    #500Gourds

  • Translating the Language of Imperialism

    Reposted from One Struggle

    That country is poor.

    Translation: Your country had bountiful natural resources until we beat the hell out of you and stole everything.

    Their government is incompetent. They are unable to govern themselves.

    Translation: We invaded you, killed a bunch of you and set the rest at each other’s throats, and installed a dictator who’s helping us steal everything. But it’s your own fault that your country is a mess.

    The US helps people all over the world.”

    Translation: If you don’t want our products or loans because they’ll ruin your economy, we’ll twist your arm until you take them. We’ll charge you for interest, inputs and maintenance far beyond the value of our original ‘assistance,’ and label ourselves saints and you ungrateful.

    Developing nations should be integrated into the global economy.”

    Translation: First we’ll steal all your natural resources and destroy your economy, and then when your people are starving we’ll give them sweatshop jobs in our factories.

    We pay low wages but their living expenses are lower so it all works out.”

    Translation: I’ll tell that lie to pacify domestic consumers, but really I don’t care if you starve.

    Okay, their lives are hard, but they should be grateful we gave them a job.”

    Translation: You have no right to dignity, safety, to send your kids to school. I need that extra profit to pay for my fifth mansion in Switzerland.

    We are bringing democracy to the world.”

    Translation: We’ll crush you.

    Without our help, they’d fall apart. They need us.”

    Translation: We don’t produce anything, but we’re violent sociopaths loaded up with guns and nuclear weapons, so we’ll keep on sucking your blood as long as we can get away with it. If you ever stop us, we’ll die.

  • What is RRN?

    LA RRN demo
    RRN demo in LA in solidarity w/Haitian garment workers.

    The Rapid Response Network (RRN) offers prompt solidarity to workers’ struggles against exploitation and repression.  We alert groups and individuals when workers call for support.

    The fights for decent wages and working conditions, plus the right to organize, are constantly met with severe punishment. We must not passively accept the presence of products on store shelves without understanding—and actively opposing—the harsh conditions of exploitation and repression under which they are produced.

    The network is comprised of people like you from all over the U.S., Canada, Europe, and we hope to grow beyond.  We are the consumers of goods, made via exploitation in countries dominated by imperialism.

    Our aim is to coordinate our efforts with workers who are organizing autonomously.  This means they are not controlled by political parties, non-profits organizations, or outside entities that limit their ability to guide their own struggles.  Part of our mission is to publicize and build support for their struggles, under their guidance and in their interests.

    The RRN was initiated in south Florida by an anti-imperialist/anti-capitalist collective – One Struggle.  Network participants do not necessarily share One Struggle’s overall viewpoints, but rally and unite for the purpose of lending solidarity to workers struggling against exploitation.

    As One Struggle-South Florida is currently not active, the RRN is now a free-standing network.  Anyone can join the RRN.  It’s simple to participate as many of our campaigns our email and social-media based. We also organize demonstrations and direct actions, beyond the digital world.

    For updates about how to support specific campaigns, please subscribe to our email list.

    If you’d like to work more directly with us, you can contact us directly and let us know what you’d like to do:  RRNsolidarity@gmail.com

    Please like, follow, and share the RRN on Facebook & Twitter.

    https://www.facebook.com/RapidResponseNetwork/

    https://twitter.com/RRNSolidarity