Tag: Garment Workers

  • Action: Apaid – Rehire Workers!

    Action: Apaid – Rehire Workers!

    2018/10/24 – Haitian garment workers, illegally fired for exercising their union rights, are asking for our support. Will you help by voicing their demands?

     

    SOTA workers at the Port Au Prince Batay Ouvriye office.

     

    Every day, we dress ourselves in the products of exploitation. Meanwhile, the workers who produce these goods are struggling for basic rights.

    Let’s pressure Haitian factory owner, Clifford Apaid, to meet the demands of illegally fired workers.

     

    Clifford Apaid in one of the Apaid Group factories.
    Clifford Apaid in one of the Apaid Group factories.

     

    CLICK HERE TO HELP 

    Scroll down for more background info.

     

    WHO is Involved

    SOTA-BO – independent textile trade union with members in several garment factories in Port Au Prince and Carrefour, Haiti. They are affiliated with Batay Ouvriye.

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

    Clifford Apaid – head of the Apaid Group/AGA Corp which owns several textile factories in Haiti. The Apaids are one of the wealthiest families in Haiti deeply involved in politics, allowing them to influence government regulatory agencies. Along with other factory owners, they strongly resist wage adjustments and increases. They consistently repress workers’ legal right to organize.

    Clifford Apaid is a graduate of Florida International University. He has a bachelor’s in Management Information Systems, another in finance and a master’s in international finance. He is also a board member of the Haitian Association of Industries (ADIH) and of the SOFIHDES development bank in Haiti.

    You & Me/Consumers – Most of the clothing produced in Haiti is sold in the US and Canada, thanks to the HOPE and HELP Acts, which allow brands to pay zero tariffs to import its products from Haiti to the US & Canada. (This means no taxes are collected to use towards desperately needed social services, public resources, and infrastructure in Haiti).


    WHAT is Happening?

    • Garment workers in Haiti receive the lowest wage in the western hemisphere – 350 Gourdes, or US $5.40 per day.
    • Their wages are consumed just by the transportation costs of getting to and from work.
    • Most live in debt, and on the brink of hunger and homelessness.
    • Production quotas in factories are often set impossibly high. Factory owners and management do not respect the law, and often do not pay the minimum wage.
    • Union members and organizers are constantly harassed and arbitrarily fired for exercising their legal rights.

    Since 2017 SOTA-BO has been organizing series of ongoing strikes, work stoppages, walk outs, marches, and discussions to push for a minimum wage adjustment. They’ve handed out thousands of leaflets, sang songs about their struggle, and mobilized thousands of workers to join them.

    Even though unions are “legally recognized,” hundreds of workers have been illegally fired for their legal acts of fighting for basic rights.

    Many workers from Apaid factories, including Premium Apparel, Silver Linings and Maton have been out of work for over a year because of these illegal firings. They are struggling to exist.

    You can click here to read the direct appeal for solidarity from SOTA-BO.


    WHY Don’t They Just Pay Them
    ?

    Factory owners in Haiti generally hold no respect for workers. In a country where feudalist ideas still hold influence and there are thousands of desperate people looking for work, textile workers are seen as an inexhaustible resource for exploitation.

    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.


    NOTE – On Consumer Guilt

    The reality is that no matter what brand you buy, from clothing to food, every good is tied to exploitation at some point in the production process.

    Rather than scour the internet for guilt-free products that do not exist, stand behind the people who produce the goods we consume, the people fighting exploitation daily.

    We are not just passive, individual consumers. We are people with conscience, with a human instinct for solidarity and collective action. We are many.

     

    Lend your solidarity. Take a stand with Haitian garment workers!


    HOW You Can Help

    Email & Call Clifford Apaid, executive director of the Apaid Group/Aga Corp

    Email:  clifford@agacorp.com

    AGA Corp address: 7209 NW 41 ST, Miami, FL 33166

    AGA Phone: 305.592.1860

    Clifford Apaid – https://www.linkedin.com/in/clifford-apaid-47231213


    SAMPLE EMAIL:

    To:  clifford@agacorp.com

    Cc:  batayouvriye@hotmail.com; rrnsolidarity@gmail.com

    Subject:  Rehire SOTA Workers & Respect Unions

    I am emailing on behalf of the many illegally fired workers at your factories – Premium Apparel, Maton, and Silver Lining.

    I insist that you and your companies respect the rights of union members and meet the following demands:

    • Reinstate all the workers who were illegally and arbitrarily fired from the Premium/Maton plants in May 2018, and pay them their wages.
    • Reinstate the Committee Section members in Silver Lining factory who were arbitrarily fired.
    • Pay all salary arrears owed to the workers from the wave of firings at Premium Apparel stemming from workers’ mobilization to demand a minimum wage adjustment in 2017.
    • Stop the repression against union members in the Apaid Group plants.

    In solidarity with Haitian garment workers,

    Your Name
    City, State, or Country

    [BACK TO TOP]

  • May Day Report Back!

    May Day Report Back!

    Thanks so much to everyone who lent their support to Batay Ouvriye (BO) and the Haitian workers movement this May Day!

    Together, we raised a total of $1,481! That’s $181 more than our original goal of $1,300. Thank you so much!

    We want to share a thank you letter from BO and a report back on May Day events in Haiti.

    Batay Ouvriye said, “the financial we received from you helped us to realize May Day activities in Port Au Prince.”

    The letter also shares how the funds were utilized.

    Click here to read the full Letter from Batay Ouvriye.

    Leading up to May Day, PLASIT-BO textile unions, peasant organizations & neighborhood groups held activities throughout the country, including leafleting; a conference & debate on low wages & the high costs of living in Port Au Prince; a day long strike on 4/24 at some factories in Port Au Prince, and a press conference, announcing workers renewed demands, including a minimum wage adjustment of 1,000 Gourdes/day ($15.50 US).

    PLASIT-BO is a  federation of 3 unions in the textile sector that includes the Apparel and Textile Workers Union-Batay Ouvriye (SOTA-BO), CODEVI Wanament Workers Union (SOKOWA), and the S&H Global Valiant Workers Union in Karakol (SOVASHG).

    Check out what happened with the unions, neighborhood groups, and peasants in their different locales.


    Port Au Prince

    haiti-google-maps

     

    In the capital city, SOTA-BO textile union sang and handed out leaflets on April 31, outside the SONAPI Industrial Park, encouraging fellow workers to join them on May 1st to march for their demand of a minimum wage adjustment of 1,000 Haitian Gourdes/day ($15.33 US).

     

    On May Day, workers of SOTA-BO and other unions gathered outside the industrial park gates, then marched to the downtown area, where there were stopped by a line of CIMO police. There were no arrests.

     

    imag2928

     

    In Haiti, May 1st is a national holiday. The government focuses people’s attention on agriculture and national production, rather than the true roots of May Day – workers’ fight for the right to organize and the eight-hour work day.

    As it’s a holiday, most work is cancelled for the day. Many of the textile workers in Port Au Prince live outside the city. It costs a lot for them to commute into the city on a day that they will not be paid. Those who showed up were very committed.

    Factory owners also worked to persuade workers from marching. In Carrefour, just south of Port Au Prince, factory owners organized a soccer match among all the factories as a distraction from the march. This year’s march was a bit smaller than last year’s, but it was combative and strong.

     


    Cap Haitien

    cap-haitien-google-maps

     

    In the north of the country in Cap Haitien, neighborhood groups  and workers affiliated with BO held their own march, echoing the demands for 1000 Gourdes, social services and more.

     

     

    Caracol

    Caracol is in the north of Haiti.

     

    Caracol is also in the North of Haiti. The Caracol Industrial park is one of the newest in Haiti, built after the 2010 earthquake. SOVAGH is the textile union here, affiliated with BO. They rode a bus to Ounaminthe to join the May Day march there.

     

    Ounaminthe

    ouanaminthe-arrondissement-google-maps

     

    SOKOWA is the BO affiliated textile union in Ounaminthe. Together with SOVAGH workers from Caracol, they marched to echo the demands put out by PLASIT-BO.

     

    Peasant Groups in the Countryside

    Peasant meeting
    Peasant meeting

    In many areas of the countryside, peasant organizations affiliated with Batay Ouvriye handed out a leaflet on May Day, insisting that their salary be based on their labor power. Many poor peasants have no basic rights, so this effort is them insisting on the same basic rights the textile workers are demanding.

    Click here to read the leaflet they handed out, translated from Kreyol to English.

     

    After May Day

    After May Day, workers at Horizon factory in Port Au Prince went on strike.

    Saturday 5/12/18 – In Port Au Prince this morning Premium Apparel factory owner, Clifford Apaid locked  out SOTA union members from entering the factory. The workers are planning a strike for this coming week on either 5/20 or 5/21, and he is trying to prevent them from mobilizing.

     

    SOTA-BO members locked out of Premium Apparel factory.
    SOTA-BO members locked out of Premium Apparel factory.

     

    The Struggle Continues!

    We  continue to stand with the Batay Ouvriye movement of textile workers, peasants and neighborhood associations.

    Be sure to follow the RRN on social media and sign up for email updates. We’ll keep you posted about ways to lend international solidarity.

    Facebook: @RapidResponseNetwork

    Twitter: @RRNsolidarity

  • $1,300 for Haitian May Day!

    $1,300 for Haitian May Day!

    May 1st is May Day – International Workers’ Day!

    This day began as a commemoration of Chicago workers’ fight for the 8 hour work day and the right to organize.

    In Haiti, workers are still battling for these essential rights.

    • Haitian garment workers receive the lowest wage in the western hemisphere – 350 Gourdes, or US $5.40.
    • Their wages are consumed just by the transportation costs of getting to and from work.
    • Most live in debt, and on the brink of hunger and homelessness.
    • Production quotas in factories are often set impossibly high. Factory owners and management do not respect the law, and often do not pay the minimum wage.
    • Union members and organizers are constantly harassed and arbitrarily fired for exercising their legal rights.

    Batay Ouvriye (Workers Fight), is an independent workers’ movement in Haiti, with affiliated textile unions throughout Haiti – SOKOWA, SOVAGH & SOTA-BO.

    For May Day, they are holding marches and activities across Haiti to bring attention to their fight.

    • They want  a decent wage that allows them to feed, clothe, house and educate themselves and their families.
    • They want safe working conditions, free of harassment.
    • They want the right to organize.

    Help the Rapid Response Network Raise $1,300 to Support Haitian May Day!

    Your contribution will be sent directly to Haiti to help pay for paper for:

    • Printing leaflets
    • Transportation costs for workers
    • Meals to feed workers at meetings
    • Costs of dealing with possible arrests.

    * * We’d like to send these funds on Monday, April 30, just in time for May Day – May 1st.

    All funds raised will be wired directly to Batay Ouvriye in Haiti.

    Every dollar counts.
    Every contribution has a direct impact in helping these workers fight for their rights.

    Thank you so much for standing with them!

    Click here to donate now through our GoFundMe page!

    #SolidarityForever <3
    #MayDayHaiti
    #RRNsolidarity