Tag: DirectAction

  • SOTA/H&H Textile Workers Strike. Which Side Are You On?

    SOTA/H&H Textile Workers Strike. Which Side Are You On?

    In January, SOTA-BO textile workers union at H&H Textiles in Carrefour, Haiti were ready to strike to force management to re-hire five women workers & union members who were unjustly fired. To avoid a work stoppage, H&H rehired three of the five workers.

    At the H&H factory, workers and union members constantly face arbitrary firings, intimidation, and unwarranted disciplinary measures. Workers are not allowed to bring their phones into the factory floor. And a particular production manager, Mrs. Khan, is known to be especially brutal with the workers. She will headbutt workers to assert her dominance over them.

    Last week, the workers of H&H said, “Enough!” They are demanding that Mrs. Khan and her brutal ways go home! They have also joined garment workers in the Ouanaminthe who are demanding an increased minimum wage from 350 Gourdes ($5.15 US) to 800 per day ($11.57 US).

    On Wed 4/5, the RRN received word of a strike underway at H&H Textiles. Since then, the struggle has intensified.

    Here is a time line of events, followed by more basic info of the entities involved:

    Wed 4/5 – SOTA textile union leads a strike and march demanding and chanting that “Mrs. Khan has to go!”

    Thurs 4/6 – H&H management locks workers out of the factory gates. They continue to protest outside the gates.

    img-20170406-wa0000

    Mon 4/10 – Workers continue the strike and mobilize again outside the factory gates. CIMO, the Haitian equivalent of a SWAT team comes to threaten the workers, but there was no clash between CIMO and the strikers.

    In the video below, the workers sing a song they wrote, “We will never give up on this fight. The future belongs to us workers.”

    Eventually some of the workers were able to get in through the gate.

    Tues 4/11 – H&H workers confront Mrs. Khan. They block her vehicle as she attempts to leave the factory complex.

    img-20170411-wa0001

    In the video below, the woman says, “We are in front of the gate… no one should try to pacify us. The time has come.”

    At 1pm the same day, the Ministry of Social Affairs met with workers and SOTA members. We have not received a report as to the outcome of this meeting.

    At this point, most of the striking workers have not had a decent meal.

    Wed 4/12 – At some point in the morning, the gates of H&H factory were burned.

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    Graffiti reads, “SOTA says 800 Gourdes minimum wage,” and “Down with Mrs. Kan.”

    Some will denounce this action because it is violent. This is violence to a piece of property. And yet a gate, a shop window, a piece of machinery is often given more value than the lives of textile workers who face violence and brutality every day. The misery wages they receive are a form a violence. Factory owners, corporate CEO’s and shareholders make millions of dollars, while workers – the very people who produce the goods – cannot afford the most basic essentials of life – food, clean water, housing, clothing, and education. These companies move entire operations across the globe in search of the absolute lowest wage, the most exploitative situations. Factory owners make sure that workers who try to fight for their rights to organize are repressed, harassed and often outright beaten.

    So if we speak of violence, it’s important to look at the larger context. The clothing we wear is produced, every day, through violence and exploitation. Imagine yourself, for a moment, as the textile worker, rather than the consumer. If at every turn, your attempt to assert your basic rights was violently repressed, how would you respond? In this context, does a burnt piece of metal really seem out of line?

    The act of striking is incredibly brave. It requires a serious sacrifice, and a level of cooperation and care for their collective interest.  Striking means no wages.  It means hungry families, no money for public transit to get to school or to the market.  It means the rent will not be paid and the possibility of homelessness.  And yet, the textile workers continue on… because they recognize that the only path to justice is through their collective fight.  It’s their only alternative to starvation wages and further exploitation.


    Which Side Are You On?

    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.

    At the same time that SOTA & H&H workers are striking in Carrefour, SOKOWA and garment workers in the north of Haiti, in Ouanaminthe, are also striking against attempts to take a 10 percent tax from their misery wages. Tomorrow, we will have an update for you on another battle taking place at the Quality Sewing factory in Port Au Prince. Here, a new chapter of SOTA is facing severe repression.

    We expect that Haitian textile workers will be requesting our solidarity soon. For now, they ask that we spread the word about their fights, and that we decide, which side are we on.

    Below is a basic run down of the who, what, why & how of this struggle. Please read it to understand the players and for ways to keep in touch.


    WHO:

    H&H Textiles – the Haiti subsidiary of Seoul, Korea based Yujin Apparel.  Their factory is in Carrefour, just south of Port Au Prince in Haiti. They produce mostly t-shirts, shorts, and sportswear.  Some brands include Children’s Place, Avia, and Athletic Works. You’ll find these brands in stores like Target, Walmart and Marshall’s.

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

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

    Mrs. Khan – a production manager at H&H Textiles who is especially brutal with workers. She physically attacks workers, shows them no respect, and has even head butted workers to try to assert her dominance over them. The workers are calling for her to be fired.

    WHAT: (Based on a conversation with a BO representative)

    Reductions: H&H consistently threatens workers with “reductions,” saying they’re going to be firing people to make the operation more profitable. The reality is that reductions are meant to intimidate people, to make them think that their job is not secure, and thereby discourage them from exercising their right to organize.

    Disciplinary Measures: H&H justifies their anti-union firings by documenting every minute and arbitrary action of workers. Workers have to sign letters, admitting their guilt or error constantly. If you are late, you must sign a letter. If a boss thinks you spoke to a fellow worker too long, they write you up, and you must sign a letter. Then these letters are used to justify anti-union suspensions and firings. “Well look, you have four letters here.” Workers need these jobs. With their salaries, they live in debt, on the edge of desperation. But without the salary, starvation and homelessness are the reality.

    Phone Policy: H&H has implemented a policy that bans workers from bringing their cell phones into the factory. These workers have families that depend on them. A phone call is the only method of communication if something happens with a child or family member. It’s yet another disrespectful policing of workers and stripping them of basic rights.

    STRIKE! Workers are fed up. Every day is a fight to exist. Most work 12-16 hour days. They receive starvation wages, while factory owners, brands and stores make millions, sometimes billions of dollars in profit. They have the legal right to a union and the right to organize. But at every turn, this right is suppressed. Now, they are taking matters into their own hands.


    WHY:

    The fight for a higher wage in Haiti is 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 you can support these workers, for now. We’ll keep you posted if they decide the situation requires more direct action.

    Click here to sign up for RRN email updates.

    Like and follow RRN on Facebook & Twitter.

    Find out about workers’ struggles in your own community.

    Click here to read further updates on this fight.

    Thank you for your solidarity!

    #RRNsolidarity
    #RightToOrganize
    #800Gourds

     

  • No roads, electricity? No taxes! Higher wages!

    No roads, electricity? No taxes! Higher wages!

    It’s true, as citizens, we must pay taxes or tariffs. However, we must see where it’s going. In Haiti, DGI is collecting taxes and tariffs but as citizens we never get services. We have to do whatever we can to live without the services the state owes us.  There are no roads, no electricity, no drinking water, no hospitals, no clean marketplace, public squares, no parks to play or for sports in the city. SERVICES ARE ZERO.

    TODAY, THEY WANT TO INCREASE THE BUDGET, IT’S ON THE BACKS OF US, WORKERS AND OTHER TOILERS, THEY WANT TO DO IT. We say NO, THAT’S NOT HAPPENING !

    – Excerpt from statement by SOKOWA textile trade union

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    Many of you already know of textile workers’ ongoing fight against a wage tax in Haiti.

    The Haitian state is pushing the Codevi Free Trade Zone (FTZ) to take a 13 percent tax out of workers’ wages. One is IRI, which is a tax on income and the other is CFGDCT which is Contribution to the Administrative and Development Fund for the Territorial Localities. State officials claim the taxes are for social services.

    While manufacturers and brands make giant profits and Haitian politicians use the state to accumulate their own wealth, neither entity invests in desperately needed social services in Haiti. There are virtually no state-provided social services throughout the country. Most services available, if any, come from Non-Governmental Agencies (NGOs). So where will this 13% tax go? The workers of SOKOWA know the answer, which is why they are leading the effort to fight back against this unjust tax.

    Workers already receive starvation wages. The legal minimum wage on the books is 350 Gourdes, or $5.15 US, per day. But the reality is that they often don’t receive this full amount. They live their lives in debt, and often on the brink of hunger and homelessness.

    In February, the RRN reported on the struggles of the textile trade union, SOKOWA, which continues to lead the fight against this wage tax in the Codevi Free Trade Zone, in the city of Ouanaminthe. The city is in the north of Haiti, right on the border of the Dominican Republic.

    After a January 21st strike and march of nearly 10,000 people, state officials agreed to meet with the workers, but held their ground on extracting the tax. So SOKOWA, garment workers, and many others took the streets again and have continued to strike.

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    In the face of starvation wages and a tax on their measly salary, SOKOWA announced their demand for factories within Codevi FTZ to increase the minimum wage to 800 Gourdes/day ($11.57 US).

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    “We the workers of Codevi demand from the government…800 gourdes for an 8 hour work day… Live 800 gourdes. Down with misery salaries.”

    In the south, in Port Au Prince, textile workers are also facing the wage tax as they struggle against union-busting, arbitrary firings, and severe repression.

    In the north and in the south of Haiti, workers are striking and fighting for their existence, for their rights to a living wage, to basic social services. They are fighting for the right to feed, clothe and house themselves and their families.

    The act of striking is incredibly brave. It requires a serious sacrifice, and a level of cooperation and care for their collective interest.  Striking means no wages.  It means hungry families, no money for public transit to get to school or to the market.  It means the rent will not be paid and the possibility of homelessness.  And yet, the workers of SOKOWA continue on… because they recognize that the only path to justice is through their collective fight.  It’s their only alternative to starvation wages and further exploitation.

    For more background info on the wage tax, including a Who, What, When, Where, Why & How, you can click here for a past RRN update.

    Please also read the direct statement from the workers of SOKOWA below.

    At this moment, we are waiting to hear from the workers to see how we can best give our solidarity. Please stay tuned as there are several important fights going on simultaneously around the country.

    We’ll be posting throughout the week to fill you in on pressing situations in Port Au Prince at two factories – H&H Textiles and Quality Sewing.

    Follow the RRN for updates, as these workers may be calling on us for solidarity soon!

    facebook.com/rapidresponsenetwork

    https://twitter.com/rrnsolidarity

    #RRNsolidarity
    #SolidarityForever
    #RightToOrganize

    Thank you for your solidarity!

    ——

    STATEMENT FROM SOKOWA TEXTILE UNION:

    Codevi Workers,

    For a number of days now, words are going around at Codevi, it’s about paying taxes or tariff to DGI (General Department of Taxes, Tariffs and Duties) meaning that deductions will come out of our already measly wages reaching up to 10% of our income. We have to know there exists a law already about that. This is not new. Codevi never made the deductions on our income to send to DGI. Today, DGI is questioning that. Codevi, according to law must make automatic deductions from our income to send to DGI. They’re talking about two different things. One is IRI, which is a tax on income and the other is CFGDCT which is Contribution to the Administrative and Development Fund for the Territorial Localities. We must pay IRI if our annual income is 60,000 Gourdes (U.S. $833.00), and for CFGDCT, 1% must be taken if the monthly income is 5,000 Gourdes (U.S. $69.00).

    It’s true, as citizens, we must pay taxes or tariffs. However, we must see where it’s going. In Haiti, DGI is collecting taxes and tariffs but as citizens we never get services. We have to do whatever we can to live without the services the state owes us.  There are no roads, no electricity, no drinking water, no hospitals, no clean marketplace, public squares, no parks to play or for sports in the city. SERVICES ARE ZERO.

    TODAY, THEY WANT TO INCREASE THE BUDGET, IT’S ON THE BACKS OF US, WORKERS AND OTHER TOILERS, THEY WANT TO DO IT. We say NO, THAT’S NOT HAPPENING ! We do not agree with any deductions for IRI nor for CFGDCT from our measly income in the factories. We do not agree that parlementarians, prime ministers and presidents and other bigwigs in the state are filling up their pockets with taxes they are forcing us to pay. As a matter of fact, with the rising cost of living, our purchasing power has plummeted. Reducing our income further through payment of taxes and other duties would make us poorer everyday. In addition, monies are collected but expenses are incurred without transparency and no one tells the citizens anything. We the workers together with other toilers in Ouanaminthe (Wanament), we say : NO, WE DON’T AGREE WITH DGI THAT IS FORCING US TO PAY IRI AND CFGDCT !

    WE REFUSE TO PAY TAXES AND DUTIES WITHOUT GETTING SERVICES !

    LET’S MOBILIZE TO LET DGI KNOW THAT !

    CODEVI/WANAMENT WORKERS UNION (SOKOWA) – 1/30/2017

     

    Ouvriye ak Ouvriyèz Codevi,

    Depi kèk jou gen yon pawòl k ap pale nan Codevi, se koze pou nou peye taks oswa enpo DGI ki ka fè y ap gen pou retire sou ti kraze n ap touche a yon kantite kòb ki ka rive jiska 10% de revni nou. Fòk nou konnen lwa sa a te toujou la. Se pa yon bagay ki nèf. Se Codevi ki pat janm pran li sou salè nou pou voye l bay DGI. Jodya, DGI ap mande kont. Codevi selon lalwa dwe pran kòb la ala sous pou fè DGI jwenn li. Yo pale de 2 koze. Youn se IRI, kidonk, Impot sur le Revenu epi CFGDCT ki se Contribution au Fonds de Gestion et de Developpement des Collectivites territoriales. Yo dwe peye IRI a depi yo fè 60,000 goud pa an kòm salè epi CFGDCT a, se 1 pou san yo dwe pran depi yo fè 5000 goud kòm revni pa mwa pou CFGDCT a.

    Se vre antanke sitwayen yon peyi, nou dwe peye taks oswa enpo. Men fòk nou wè kote yo ale. Ann Ayiti, DGI ap resevwa kòb enpo ak taks men nou menm kòm sitwayen, nou pa resevwa okenn sèvis an retour. Se nou ki pou degajen pou nou viv san sèvis leta dwe nou. Pa gen wout, pa gen kouran, pa gen dlo potab, pa gen lopital, pa gen mache pwòp, plas piblik, teren pou jwe oswa fè spo, elatriye nan komin lan. POU SEVIS SE ZEWO.

    JODYA, YO BEZWEN OGMANTE RESET FISKAL LA, SE SOU DO NOU MENM OUVRIYE AK LÒT TRAVAYÈ NAN PEYI A YO VLE FÈ L. Nou di NON, SA PAP PASE ! Nou pa dakò pou yo pran ni IRI ni CFGDCT sou ti chocho n ap redi di pou fè nan izin yo. Nou pa dakò pou se palmantè, premye minis ak prezidan ak lòt gwo otorite leta k ap fè yo sou do nou ak taks y ap egzije nou peye. Dayè ak lavichè k ap ogmante se pouvwa dacha nou k ap bese. Retire sou li pou peye taks ak enpo se rann nou pi pòv chak jou. Mete sou sa, kòb ap kolekte men depans yo pa fèt ak transparans ni y opa rann sitwayen yo kont. Nou menm ouvriye ansanm ak lòt travayè nan Wanament nou di : NON, NOU PA DAKÒ AK DGI K AP EGZIJE N PEYI IRI AK CFGDCT !

    NOU PA DAKÒ PEYE TAKS AK ENPÒ SAN NOU PA JWENN SÈVIS !

    ANN MOBILIZE POU NOU FÈ DGI KONNEN SA !

     

    SENDIKA OUVRIYE CODEVI WANAMENT – 30/1/2017

     

  • NOW! Before 1pm – Take a Selfie for H&H Workers

    H&H Textiles is feeling the pressure!

    Today at 1pm EST, SOTA-BO is meeting with H&H Textiles management to discuss the illegal firing of four SOTA union members.

    Ruth Joseph, Olga Miallard, Jean Louise Marie Ederse, & Lucitha Julessaint are all SOTA union members who were fired for organizing for their rights, for fighting against their exploitation. (More info here).

    LET’S PUT EXTRA PRESSURE ON H&H BEFORE THE MEETING.

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

    • Email your selfie with a sign reading, “Rehire SOTA Members TODAY!”
    • Include your Name, City, State, Country in the text of the email
    • #RRNsolidarity #500Gourds #RightToOrganize

    Let’s flood H&H’s inbox with photos of solidarity!

    Rehire SOTA Members TODAY.