Yahoo – AFP,
5 june 2013
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Factory
workers check the quality of sportswear at a Nike production line in
the
Vietnamese capital of Ho Chi Minh City, on February 15, 2003.
|
Thousands
of Cambodian workers protested Wednesday against the arrest of strikers during
a police crackdown at a factory making clothes for US sportswear giant Nike,
unionists said.
Cambodia's
workers are seeking to flex their muscles over discontent at low wages and
tough conditions in the multibillion-dollar textile industry, which produces
goods for top western brands.
Eight
workers were arrested on Monday at the sportswear factory when riot police
broke up a demonstration calling for higher pay, but the charges against them
have not yet been announced, Free Trade Union secretary general Say Sokny told
AFP.
About 2,000
to 3,000 garment workers rallied outside the Kampong Speu provincial court in
southern Cambodia demanding their release, she said, as riot police stood by.
At least 10
workers were hurt during the crackdown, which followed violent scenes at the
same factory last week when riot police allegedly used stun batons against
strikers, who have now been protesting for more than a week.
A pregnant
woman suffered a miscarriage in that incident, according to protesters.
Days later,
three people were knocked unconscious after police fired water jets at a
protest in Phnom Penh over disputed land, adding to activists' concerns over
the kingdom's tough stance towards dissent.
Rights
groups said the crackdowns suggest Cambodia's government is seeking to silence
its critics before elections due on July 28, with strongman premier Hun Sen
looking to extend his near three-decade grip on power.
"The
government fears the protests will lead to social unrest because of the
upcoming election and what happened in the Arab world and recently in
Turkey," Ou Virak, president of the Cambodian Centre for Human Rights,
told AFP.
"But
the government's iron-fisted action will only cause anger," he added.
Cambodia's
textile industry employs about 650,000 people and is a key source of foreign
income for the impoverished nation.
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