Focus
-
[Report] Disney, Walmart and ICTI Together Make Workers Rights Violations Normal and Sustainable
22 Oct 2010This is not the first time Students & Scholars Against Corporate Misbehavior (SACOM) reports on the violations of basic workers rights found at Walmart and Disney supplier factories, and International Council of Toy Industries (ICTI) certified factories. It is a big shame that these organizations, given the enormous amount of resources they have, do not perform effectively to monitor their suppliers and certified factories, and actually, by being incompetent in monitoring and helping factories to improve, they allow abuse of workers rights to continue, or even worse still, become a normal and commonplace practice.
In the past six months, SACOM researchers have paid several visits to two factories, Sunny Toys (Shenzhen) Co. Ltd. and Dongguan Crown-Ace Toys Company Ltd.,which are both certified by ICTI, and producing for Disney and Walmart. Unsurprisingly, in the supply chain of Walmart and Disney, SACOM found the following violations of basic workers rights:
excessive overtime up to 160 hours a month, with overnight work, more than four times of the limit stipulated in the Chinese Labour Law
- no overtime premium
- no rest day in a whole month, or only 1 or 2 days in a month
- forced and unfair deduction for housing and food from workers not living in dormitory
- punitive fines
- lack of proper social insurance for workers
- sex discrimination in recruitment
- basic health and safety problems
- ineffective worker representative mechanism or union
- child worker
- deceptions in audits
The above are in blatant violations of the labour laws in China. They are also systematic management issues which led SACOM to wonder, what Walmart, Disney and ICTI have been doing in their corporate social responsibility program to monitor these factories? The companies arrange audits to monitor their supply chains, but the quality of these audits are highly questionable and unable to discover the violations happening to workers in reality.
On 10 July 2010, it was reported in the South China Morning Post that, the Vice President of ICTI CARE Foundation’s Asian operations, spoke at a seminar that “bribery and wages are not the only problems…We have found child labour cases every month.” However, when SACOM and Stop Toying Around wrote to the governance board of the foundation, asking for more relevant information on the bribery, wage and child labour issues, ICTI refused to provide concrete figures about the violations it has found. The information is also missing in its recently published biannual report. SACOM regrets the lack of transparency of ICTI and its attempt to cover up the real magnitude of the labour rights violations in toy industry in China.
Full report is available here.
News
-
{in Dutch}: China is the real slave to iPad
5 Nov 2010 In China zitten de enige echte iPadslaven Door: Edward Deiters Gepubliceerd: vandaag 00:09 Update: vandaag 06:32 Na een golf van zelfmoorden onder productie-medewerkers was er veel rumoer rond Foxconn, de Taiwanese productiegigant die onze gadgets maakt. Volgens critici is er maar weinig veranderd. Wanneer een blunderend bedrijf - of fout regime -de pr-firma Burson-Marsteller inhuurt weet je [...]Read more -
[lang_hk]蘋果日報:蘇州代工廠悲歌 擦亮 iPhone蘋果仔 女工中毒行唔到[/lang_hk][lang_zh]苹果日报:苏州代工厂悲歌 擦亮 iPhone苹果仔 女工中毒行唔到[/lang_zh]
31 Oct 2010 Sorry, this entry is only available in 簡体中文 and 繁體中文. Read more -
techeye.net: Foxconn Chennai strike oppression sparks backlash
27 Oct 2010 Foxconn’s up to its usual tricks with reports of striker oppression toward poorly treated staff in Chennai, South India. The Students and Scholars Against Corporate Misbehaviour (SACOM) group has said it is wrong that 319 workers were arrested over picketing for wage increases and better working conditions. Foxconn production line workers at the plant only [...]Read more -
PC World: Foxconn Workers Exploited in India, Activists Say
27 Oct 2010 John Ribeiro John Ribeiro Students & Scholars Against Corporate Misbehavior (SACOM) has objected to the arrest earlier this month of about 319 workers of Foxconn International Holdings at a factory in Chennai, south India. The workers were striking for a wage increase among other demands. The basic salary for Foxconn production line workers in Chennai is [...]Read more