Tag: Garment Workers

  • Police Block Industrial Park. President Offers a Bogus Wage.

    Police Block Industrial Park. President Offers a Bogus Wage.

    Monday – July 31, 2017 – Haitian garment workers planned to take the streets again today to demand 800 Gourdes/day (US$12.82) minimum wage. But, they encountered heavy police presence at the Sonapi Industrial Park in Port Au Prince. The police are blocking the gates to the industrial park, locking workers inside the gates of the park.

    Mon 07.31.17 - Port Au Prince - Police block the entrance of Sonapi Industrial Park.
    Mon 07.31.17 – Port Au Prince – Police block the entrance of Sonapi Industrial Park.

    SOTA-BO textile union planned to protest today and all this week in response to Haitian President, Jovenel Moise’s bogus wage proposal.

    Last week, the president sent a letter to the Supreme Council on Salaries (CSS) – the entity tasked with making a salary recommendation. In the letter, he said the council needed to come up with a wage that would allow workers to live. Previously, the council proposed a wage of 335 Gourdes, an insult to workers.

    The CSS, comprised of representatives of factory owners, the state and labor then lobbed this responsibility to the president. They called on him to make a recommendation to avoid upsetting factory owners, as the council is a farce. They consistently represent factory owners interests.

    Friday, July 28, 2017 – The RRN received word that President Jovenel Moise proposed a wage of 350 Gourdes – yet another insult to workers.

    jovenel-moise-780x405

    Workers have made their position clear – 800 Gourdes. This demand is actually a concession, if one looks at what is actually needed for a worker and their family to survive.  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. The cost of living has only increased since then.

    haitiworkersstrike

    We are waiting for next steps from workers.

    We will be in touch soon with ways to support and help continue the fight.

    Thank you so much for all your solidarity, thus far.

    The struggle continues!

    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

  • Pressure Works! Fairway Workers Rehired.

    Pressure Works! Fairway Workers Rehired.

    Last week, the RRN reported that National Police shot at workers with real bullets to break up a small protest at Fairway Apparel textile factory in Port Au Prince, Haiti. Three workers were severely injured. Many were hurt, including a pregnant woman. A representative of Batay Ouvriye was beaten.

    Workers were protesting an increased production quota, imposed by management, when the police opened fire. Fairway management  fired 13 workers who were all union members. Fellow workers stopped work to protest the firing of the union members and called on the RRN to stand in solidarity.

    Work stoppage inside Fairway Apparel factory.
    Work stoppage inside Fairway Apparel factory.


    Then, Fairway felt our pressure! 

    Thank you so much for responding to workers’ request to pressure Liu Chunmou, Director of Fairway Apparel.

    Thanks in part to your emails, all thirteen workers were re-hired.  Fairway is also paying for the medical care of all the workers who were shot and injured. As far as we know, there were no deaths.

    Thank you again for your ongoing solidarity!

    It is amazing to see the map light up with support from around the world for this monumental fight.

    Workers have been fighting since May for a minimum wage adjustment of 800 Gourdes/day (US$12.80).

    Now, even the Haitian Senate is taking the side of workers.

    In the coming days, we will likely share updates on Haitian President Jovenel Moise weighing in on the matter.

    Please be sure to join & follow the RRN on Facebook, Twitter, & email.

    The struggle continues! Workers will continue to mobilize this week and next for 800 Gourdes!

    img-20170519-wa0005

    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

  • Workers Shot. Union Busting. Action NOW.

    Workers Shot. Union Busting. Action NOW.

    Saturday, 07.15.17 – Port Au Prince, Haiti –  National Police shot at workers with real bullets to break up a small protest at Fairway Apparel textile factory.

    Three workers were severely injured. Many were hurt, including a pregnant woman. A representative of Batay Ouvriye was beaten.

    Workers were protesting an increased production quota, imposed by management, when the police opened fire.

    In the video below, workers confront management and the police in the office of Fairway Apparel.

    This is a photo of one of the police officers who opened fire on the workers.

    cop-fairway-apparel

    Production quotas in textile factories are set impossibly high. Factory owners and management do not respect the law, and often do not pay the existing minimum wage. Often, workers will only make the minimum wage if their module meets the quota. Union members and organizers are constantly harassed and arbitrarily fired for exercising their legal rights.

    Monday, 07.17.17 – Workers showed up to find Fairway Apparel closed for Monday 7/17 and 7/18. In the video below, the woman says, “This is the picture of the many people who cannot enter the work place.”

    The memo pictured below says that the factory will be closed Monday, 7/17/17 and Tuesday, 7/18/17 due to a “perturbation” that took place on Saturday, 7/15/17.

    fairway-closed-notice

     

    Garment workers, organized as unions, have been striking and mobilizing since May 19 for a minimum wage adjustment of 800 Gourdes (US$12.80); meal, transportation and housing subsidies; social services; and a stop to increased production quotas.

    Tuesday, 07.18.17 – Fairway management fired 13 workers. They are all union members. 7 of these workers are from SOTA-BO. The below letter states that the workers were fired for inciting workers, implementing an illegal strike, for being violent, and for using their cell phones. But, who was shot?

    fairway-firing-letter

    We know the real reason for these firings is union-busting and a complete lack of respect for workers. Factory owners see and treat workers as slave labor, not as humans.

    Since May 19, garment workers have been striking and mobilizing for:

    1. A minimum wage adjustment of 800 Gourdes (US$12.80) per day, on top of meal, transportation and housing subsidies
    2. Social Services.
    3. A stop to increased production quotas.

    Now, workers at Fairway are standing in solidarity. They refuse to work until the fired union members are reinstated.

    Work stoppage inside Fairway Apparel factory.
    Work stoppage inside Fairway Apparel factory.

    TODAY, please stand with these Fairway workers in solidarity.

    Workers are asking that we flood the email inbox of Liu Chunmou, Director of Fairway Apparel.

    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 FAIRWAY.

    Sample Email:

    To:   chunmouliu@yahoo.com

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

    Subject: STOP SHOOTING WORKERS.

    I am emailing to say that as Fairway Apparel attempts to stop workers from receiving a decent wage, the world is watching.

    You claim that workers are acting violently, as you call in the police to shoot them.

    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 the 13 union members/workers you fired, without any conditions.
    2. Pay workers 800 Gourdes minimum wage & provide social services.
    3. Respect workers’ right to organize.
    4. Stop attacking 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.

    Organizers in Haiti tell us there are two major reasons that the Haitian state, factory owners, and major brands really do not care about workers’ interests:

    1. Cheap labor is how they are able to accumulate their profit. They will not let go of this without a fierce fight.
    2. They do not need Haitian workers as consumers, so they are not concerned with paying them enough to buy goods. They are only viewed as cheap labor. They are also viewed as replaceable when there are thousands of unemployed people in Haiti, desperate for work.

    This is why the work of Batay Ouvriye, and their affiliated textile unions – SOTA-BO, SOKOWA & SOVAGH – is so important. They are organizing a movement of people – workers, peasants, neighborhoods – who are pushing back against these attempts to exploit the Haitian people. They are growing the idea among Haitians that they only way forward is through collective struggle for a better Haiti.

    Please make a contribution to aid them in these efforts. Click here to DONATE.

    Also, be sure to stay up to date. Click here to sign up for Rapid Response Network updates.

    THANK YOU FOR YOUR SOLIDARITY. <3

    #800Gourdes
    #RightToOrganize
    #SolidarityForever