Tag: 800Gourdes

  • UPDATE: Workers Face National Police in Full Force

    UPDATE: Workers Face National Police in Full Force

    Port au Prince, Haiti – Monday, 07.10.17 – This morning, garment workers were met by national police in full force, both inside and outside, the Sonapi Industrial Park. Workers scheduled to gather at Sonapi before taking the streets again today, to march for a minimum wage adjustment of 800 Gourdes (US$12.80).

    07.10.17 - National Police outside SONAPI Industrial Park
    07.10.17 – National Police outside SONAPI Industrial Park

    Last week, in a press conference, the workers announced, “We won’t take anything lower than HTG800 (US$12.80)… We gave them an ultimatum of this Friday [07.07.17] to make their proposal.”

    “Them,” references the Haitian State Salary Council, or CSS. It’s comprised of a representative from the following entities: factory owners, the Haitian government, and labor. The CSS consistently represents the interests of factory owners, as labor is always in minority. Often owners will pay off or manipulate the labor representative on this council.

    On Friday, 07.07.17, the RRN received a photo of the CSS proposal for wage increases. They offered the workers 335 Gourdes. The existing starvation wage is 300 Gourdes.

    This offer is an insult to the workers.

    “If you spend HTG150 of your salary on food and HTG75 on transport, what do you have left to live with?” asked Batay Ouvriye representative, Yannick Etienne, in last week’s press conference.

    A 2014 study by The Solidarity Center titled “The High Cost of Low Wages in Haiti,” concluded that, based on a standard 48-hour work week, Haitian workers should be paid at least 1,006 gourdes per day to adequately provide for themselves and their families.

    That was three years ago. Workers are demanding less than what is said they actually need to survive.

    With this morning’s massive police presence, factory owners and the Haitian state have made clear that they value the profits of slave labor far too much to pay a decent wage to workers. Rather than negotiate, they use the police to repress workers.

    We are waiting to see how this situation plays out, and to hear from the workers how they’d like us to proceed.

    Please be ready to take action.

    In the video below, workers hand out leaflets for today’s march, singing, “Nou vale ouit san gourd!” We are worth 800 gourd. We deserve 800 gourd.

    Thank You!

    GIANT thanks to all people from around the world who continue to stand with Haitian garment workers and their fight for a minimum wage adjustment!

    Your donations, emails, social media posts, tweets and shares continue to have a major impact. The Haitian government, factory owners, and regulatory agencies, normally function with impunity, exploiting and repressing workers as they please. They assume that we don’t know or care where Haiti is. They assume that we only care about consuming cheap goods.

    Now, they know that the world is watching. We are not just passive consumers. We are humans expressing our instinct for collectivity and international solidarity.

    They cannot repress people fighting for their rights. We will not stand for that. We are many. We are strong.

    The workers have said they will not stop until they receive 800 Gourdes. Let’s join them in their resolve.

    Don’t stop. Kenbe fem. Stand firm.


    Please consider making a donation to help workers continue their efforts.

    Your contribution will be used to provide meals to workers at meetings; to print leaflets; to help transport organizers; and to recoup the costs of mobilizing in four locations, since May 19.

    After weeks of strikes and mobilizations, many have been arrested. Some must return to work in order to eat. Some have been denied entry into the factories for their participation in the strikes, and cannot pay rent. Some are facing medical bills from police repression.

    While many workers are hungry, tired, and struggling to survive, their resolve does not wane.

    They are determined to continue this fight. They must. Their survival depends on it.

    CLICK HERE TO DONATE.

    Thank you for your solidarity! <3

  • No Union Busting! Call for Action from Haiti.

    No Union Busting! Call for Action from Haiti.

    * Updated Thursday, 06.29.17

    Haitian garment workers have been striking and demonstrating for a minimum wage adjustment from 300 Gourdes (just under US $5) to 800 Gourdes/day (about US $12) since May.

    Despite the fact that workers are exercising their legal right to organize, factory owners are union busting in an effort to isolate and punish union organizers.

    They are targeting SOTA-BO union leaders with selective suspensions and by locking them out of the factories.

    Workers are assigned to production modules, or groups. In the sign below, posted at Premium Apparel factory, Premium lists the module numbers that should return to work on May 31. It then says that Premium will let all other workers know when to return to work. It is not a coincidence that the modules with union organizers have been excluded from returning to work and entering the factory.

    photo-ya-letter-premium-note

     

    Police block workers from entering Premium Apparel.
    Police block workers from entering Premium Apparel.

    There is a heavy military presence at the factories.

    photo-ya-letter-police
    On 06/28/17, Yannick Etienne, an organizer with Batay Ouvriye (BO) emailed the RRN to fill us in on this situation.

    Greetings,

    Thank you for the great show of solidarity with the struggle thus far. The garment workers are asking RRN to launch a campaign to denounce the anti union activities at the Apaid plant, Premium Apparel and at the [Felix] Abraham plant, Quality Sewing. We are asking that letters be sent to demand the reinstatement of workers without conditions. Let’s flood their e-mail boxes to denounce their anti union practices.

    At the bottom of the page, you can read the full letter and account of the union-busting happening at Premium Apparel and Quality Sewing factories.

    Quality Sewing is owned and operated by Abraham Felix.

    Premium Apparel, SA is owned and operated by the powerful Apaid family.

    *Update as of 06/29/17 – Garment workers let us know that the same union-busting is also happening at H&H Textiles. So, we’ve added contact info for Jay Jihoon Kim, General Director of H&H Textiles.

    Let’s do our part to pressure the factory owners and the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs in Haiti!

    Below is an email you can copy and paste.

    Send it as many times as you can, from all your different email accounts.


    LET’S FLOOD THEM WITH OUR SOLIDARITY.

    Sample Email:

    To:   AFELIXMH2@gmail.com; gsassine@gbgroup.com; mapaid@agacorp.com; Jay@yjapp.com bureaumediationsecteurtextile@gmail.com; francois@betterwork.org; marie-louise.russo@adih.ht

    cc: batayouvriye@hotmail.com; contact@rapidresponsenetwork.info

    Subject: STOP UNION BUSTING. 800 GOURDES.

    I am emailing in support of union members who are being prevented from entering and working at Premium Apparel, Quality Sewing and H&H Textiles.

    Apaid, Felix and H&H make millions of dollars in profit by exploiting these workers.

    Workers are within their rights to organize and demand decent pay to house, feed, clothe and educate themselves.

    They cannot be punished for exercising their rights as a union.

    I insist on the following:

    1. Reinstate workers without any conditions.
    2. Pay workers 800 Gourdes minimum wage & provide social services.
    3. Respect workers’ right to organize.
    4. Stop the repression against workers!

    In solidarity with Haitian garment workers,

    Your Name
    City, State, or Country

    #RRNsolidarity
    #RightToOrganize
    #800Gourds
    #STOPUNIONBUSTING


    Please consider making a donation to help workers continue their efforts.

    Your contribution will be used to provide meals to workers at meetings; to print leaflets; to help transport organizers; and to recoup the costs of mobilizing in four locations for a month.

    After weeks of strikes and mobilizations, the workers are now regrouping. Many have been arrested. Some must return to work in order to eat. Some have been denied entry into the factories for their participation in the strikes.

    While many workers are hungry, tired, and struggling to survive, their resolve does not wane.

    They are determined to continue this fight. They must. Their survival depends on it.

    CLICK HERE TO DONATE.

    Thank you for your solidarity! <3


    Account & Documentation of  Union-Busting:

    The movement started on May Day to demand 800 gourdes as the new minimum wage in the textile sector. Then on May 19th, we had a march and the mobilization continues for the rest of the week. Instigated by ADIH, the factory owners Association, owners did a lock for 2 days. However when workers from Premium Apparel went back to work on June 23rd, they saw a note on the gate- telling which modules management will accept to get to work.

    photo-ya-letter-premium-note

     

     

    As you can see, it was a way to select who can get back to work or not. Management selects people they from Maton (Bldg #2) to let them work in the Bdlg#1 called Premium. It was very difficult to get in. They had heavily armed police at the entrance door and in front of the factory when workers went back to work. (see some pictures…)

    Photos of Lock out, Selective Suspension…

    photo-ya-letter-police

    pic-ya-letter-premium-entrance

    pic-ya-letter-premium-entrance2

    pic-ya-letter-premium-entrance3

     

    First email sent to Mr. Apaid and Mme Morissette

    [ORIGINAL – KREYOL]

    Bonjour M. Apaid,

    Bonjour Madam Morisset,

    Nou gen dives manb sendika SOTA-BO nan Premium ki ap tann yo rele yo pou yo vin Travay. N ap mande nou ki le sa ap fet sitou gen rime ki vle fe kwe se kontra Travay yo antrepriz la rezilye. Eske nou kapab klarifye kesyon sa a pou nou sivouple. Fe nou konnen ki le y ap retounen nan pos Travay yo.

    Mesi pou repons rapid nou ak konpreyansyon nou.

    Salitasyon sendikal nou.

    Yannick ETIENNE

    [ENGLISH, GOOGLE TRANSLATE VERSION]

    Bonjour M. Apaid,

    Hello Mrs. Morisset,

    We have various member unions Sota-BO Premium waiting to call them to come to work. We wonder when this will occur mainly rumored that suggests is labor contracts terminating enterprise. Can we clarify this question for us PLEASE. Let us know when they will return to their work positions.

    Thank you for quick response and understanding.

    Union greetings.

    Yannick ETIENNE

    After several exchanges over the phone and emails with Mr. Apaid or Mme Morissette regarding this selection that they were doing, we received responses like the workers were not fired but the company has to get a letter from us notifying that the strike is over so they can get back to work.

    We told them that we were in total disagreement with their position. They sent a letter to Ministry of Social Affairs and Labor (MAST) making it official. We went to the Bureau of Mediation of the Textile Sector (BMST) and requested a meeting with Mr. Apaid.

    We met twice on the subject. To test their good faith, we sent a letter to the Minister of Labor saying that we call for a truce over the mobilization, so that our members could go back to work. They refused to let our committee members to get back to Premium (Bldg #1). That’s where they used to work. And they are still waiting to get back to work.

    Management wants them to go to work at the other building. But they were already informed about the closure of this plant because of the reduction from Gildan. So, it’s clear that Apaid want to get rid of the committee members. Although he is saying that he did not terminate them.

  • Not Your Wage Slaves! Garment Workers Continue to Fight.

    Not Your Wage Slaves! Garment Workers Continue to Fight.

    “It is slavery all over again.”
    – Anonymous Haitian garment worker

    $5/day. Could you survive on $5/day?

    TODAY, Monday, June 26, 2017, Haitian garment workers in Port Au Prince are in the streets again, continuing their fight for a minimum wage adjustment from 300 Gourdes (a little less than US $5) to 800 Gourdes (about US $12).

    06.26.17 - Port Au Prince - Garment workers take the streets.
    06.26.17 – Port Au Prince – Garment workers take the streets.

    We often hear that it’s OK for workers in dominated countries to receive such low wages, because cost of living is far lower than the US, Canada or Europe. However, the reality is that wages in Haiti have not kept up with the cost of living. Workers are paid in Gourdes, but they consume in US dollars, because most food and other goods are imported, not produced in Haiti. So, the cost of goods is not that different from the US.

    With the wage of about $5/day (US), workers’ pay is mostly absorbed by food and transportation to and from work. When payday comes, they are saddled in debt from borrowing for food, rent, and education for their children. So, they pay off as many debts as they can, and start the next week(s) still in debt, still hungry, still on the brink of homelessness.

    Factory owners, like Charles H. Baker, Clifford Apaid, George Sassine, Allain Villard, and Fernando Capellan, make millions of dollars in profits. They produce for brands and stores like Gildan Activewear, Hanes, Fruit of the Loom, Levi’s, Gap, JC Penney, Walmart and Target. They justify starvation wages with the mantra of, “something is better than nothing.”


    Workers cannot survive on 300 Gourdes. They are strung along, paid just enough to get back to the factory… never enough to escape their exploitation and debt.

    This is WAGE SLAVERY, and workers are justly fighting back for their rights.

    Since May 19, garment workers have carried out strikes, work stoppages, marches, and demonstrations, throughout Haiti in four main cities – Port Au Prince, Carrefour, Ounaminthe and Caracol. They stand firm in their demand for 800 Gourdes.

    Friday, June 23rd, workers held a sit in, in front of the SONAPI Industrial Park in Port Au Prince.

    sonapi


    Saturday, June 24th
    , workers again gathered outside SONAPI in Port Au Prince to hand out leaflets and to call workers to mobilize again this Monday, June 26th, in support of their demand for 800 Gourdes. In the video below, they chant, “Monday morning! Agitation!”

    Saturday, June 24th, Le Nouvelliste, the main newspaper of Haiti, published an article on the perspective of factory owners. Six textile manufacturing companies – The Willbes Haitian SA; MGA Haiti SA; Astro Carton d’Haiti SA; Haiti Cheung Won SA; Textile Youm Kwang SA and Pacific Sports Haiti SA – are pressuring president Jovenel Moise to halt workers’ mobilizations. After weeks of stopped and slowed down production, the companies have lost millions of dollars (US). Now, they say that if the workers do not stop, they will be forced to seek “other alternatives in search of stability.”

    For the garment industry, the globe is viewed as two separate sections. They look at Asia as one option, and Central/South America/the Caribbean as their other option. But usually they like to utilize both, rather than choosing between them. They ping-pong with their business from one country to the next, pitting nation against nation in competition with one another for who can provide goods at the lowest cost.

    Union organizers in Haiti shared their perspective of the situation. They say this article is a preface indicating the possibility of two things:

    1. Repression to squash the garment workers’ upcoming new wave of resistance
    2. Pressure for the government to hasten a wage adjustment


    TODAY. Let’s also send a message to Haitian President, Jovenel Moise and Prime Minister, Jack Guy Lafontant.

    “Pay Workers #800Gourdes!”

    Let’s flood their Twitter feeds. Send Facebook Direct Messages. Post on their Facebook pages.


    Jovenel Moise:

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jovenelmoise/

    Twitter: @moisejovenel

    Jack Guy Lafontant:

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jglafontant

    Twitter: @LafontantGuy


    Sample Tweets:

    @moisejovenel Pay #Haiti #GarmentWorkers #800Gourdes #StopWageSlavery

    @LafontantGuy Solidarity w/ #Haiti #GarmentWorkers #800Gourdes #StopWageSlavery


    Sample FB direct message:

    I am messaging in support of Haitian garment workers.

    Factory owners and the brands they produce for make millions, sometimes billions of dollars in profit by exploiting these workers with wage slavery. They are within their rights to organize and demand decent pay to house, feed, clothe and educate themselves.

    Garment workers are not wage slaves.

    I insist on the following:

    Pay workers 800 Gourdes minimum wage & provide social services.

    Respect workers’ right to organize.

    Stop the repression against workers!

    In solidarity with Haitian garment workers,

    Your Name
    City, State, or Country

    #StopWageSlavery
    #800Gourds
    #RRNsolidarity
    #RightToOrganize


    Please consider making a donation to help workers continue their efforts.

    Your contribution will be used to provide meals to workers at meetings; to print leaflets; to help transport organizers; and to recoup the costs of mobilizing in four locations for a month.

    After weeks of strikes and mobilizations, the workers are now regrouping. Many have been arrested. Some must return to work in order to eat. Some have been denied entry into the factories for their participation in the strikes.

    While many workers are hungry, tired, and struggling to survive, their resolve does not wane.

    They are determined to continue this fight. They must. Their survival depends on it.

    CLICK HERE TO DONATE.

    Thank you for your solidarity! <3