Beware of Mickey - Disney Sweatshops
in South China
Date: Thu, 11 Jan 2001 09:29:31 +1100
From:
ccc@xs4all.nl (clean clothes campaign)
To:
Nettime <nettime-l@bbs.thing.net>
Dear Friends,
Hong Kong Christian Industrial
Committee (CIC) has released our latest
Disney report (BOM- Beware Of Mickey Disney sweatshops in the
South China)
on December 1. It is about the labour rights violations at 12
China
factories producing for Disney. So far, we did not get much public
attention to urge Disney to fix the problems, especially in the
US, the
main battlefield supposed.
We have drafted a letter to
Michael Eisner Disney CEO. Please see the
letter below and circulate through your network. We are collecting
the
letters in local, regional, international levels and planning
to pass them
to Disney company in their shareholder meeting in February. pls
return
your signed letter to hkcic@hknet.com
In case you don't have all the
materials -- attached you'll find a summary
of the report. The detailed information in English is available
on MSN's
web-site: www.maquilasolidarity.org
Below is a draft letter to Disney CEO Michael Eisner.
If you want to know more about
the report and campaign, please feel free
to contact me at hkcic@hknet.com
Show your support to Disney
workers in China.
in solidarity,
Alice Kwan
Researcher
*****************************************************
Hong Kong Christian Industrial Committee (HKCIC)
704-5, 57 Peking Road, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, Hong Kong SAR
T#: (852) 2366 5860 F#: (852) 2724 5098
E-mail: hkcic@hknet.com
URL: http://www.cic.org.hk
***************************************************
Sample Letter
December 15, 2000
Mr. Michael Eisner, CEO
Walt Disney Company
500 South Buena Vista St.
Burbank, CA 91521
Fax: 818-846-7319
Dear Mr. Eisner:
RE: Disney Sweatshops in South China
I am/We are writing to express
my/our very serious concerns about recent
reports of sweatshop abuses in factories producing Disney products
in
China. According to a report by the Hong Kong Christian Industrial
Committee, workers are being forced to work up to 18 hours a day,
seven
days a week, often under dangerous working conditions, for poverty
wages.
Workers interviewed complain of bad food and dangerous and overcrowded
living conditions. Obviously, these working and living conditions
are
totally unacceptable, and are clearly in violation of both Chinese
Labour
Law and your company's code of conduct.
As promised in your code of
conduct, Disney should ensure that its
contractors respect workers' rights. However, your company's current
monitoring program appears to be inadequate and ineffective. Rather
than
cutting and running from contract factories in violation of the
Disney
code and Chinese law, which would only cause more suffering for
the
affected workers, Disney should act responsibly and work with
your
contractors to correct the problems immediately.
I/We strongly urge Disney to
do the following:
1. Promote workers' rights education at the workplace so that
workers are
aware of their rights and able to make complaints when those rights
are
violated.
2. Involve workers in the monitoring process. They should be empowered
to
act as on-going workplace monitors.
3. Provide accessible and trustworthy channels (e.g. letter box
in the
factory with prepaid postal envelopes) for workers to lodge complaints
to
the company and interested third parties. The company should guarantee
that
there will be no retaliation against workers who register complaints.
4. Strictly monitor and assist your suppliers to comply with the
national
labour laws and Disney's Code. Instead of simply cutting and running,
Disney should work with the non-complying factories to improve
the
situation.
5. Disclose all information on your suppliers for public scrutiny.
I/we look forward to receiving
a prompt reply outlining the specific steps
your company is taking to correct these problems and to make your
monitoring program more transparent, credible and effective.
Yours sincerely,
Name/ Organization / Contact Information
About the Study:
In March-November 2000, the
Hong Kong Christian Industrial Committee (CIC)
investigated working conditions in 12 Disney contract factories
in
Guangdong province in southern China. Five were toy factories,
two
garment, three accessory, one plastics, and one watch factory.
Some are
regular suppliers to Disney, and some are seasonal suppliers.
All were
producing for Disney during the investigation period. Most of
the products
manufactured in the factories were for export to North America
and Europe.
At least one factory was producing for export to Canada. The CIC
interviewed five to 15 workers from each factory.
Worker Profile:
The vast majority of workers
in the 12 factories are young, single,
female, migrant workers from rural areas in inland provinces.
Most are
between the ages of 18 and 30, though some are as young as 16.
General Findings and Recommendations:
Although Disney claims that
its code of conduct and so-called
"independent" monitoring system are ensuring respect
for workers' right in
its supply factories in China and other countries, the CIC study
found
that violations of the Disney code of conduct and Chinese labour
law were
commonplace. Those violations include: excessively long hours
of work,
poverty wages, unreasonable fines, workplace hazards, poor food,
and
dangerously overcrowded dormitories.
The study also found that few
workers interviewed were familiar with the
Disney code of conduct and monitoring system, and that workers
who had
been exposed to the code and/or interviewed by monitors were often
subjected to threats and intimidation to falsify work records
or answer
monitors' questions "properly" according to management-prepared
scripts.
The study concludes that Disney's
code of conduct and monitoring system
are ineffective and of little use to workers.
The report recommends that Disney
do the following:
1. Promote workers' rights training at the workplace.
2. Actively involve workers in the on-going workplace monitoring
process.
3. Provide accessible and trustworthy channels (e.g. letter boxes
in
factories with prepaid postal envelopes) for workers to lodge
complaints to
the company and other interested third parties.
4. Guarantee that there will be no retaliation against workers
who make
complaints.
5. Strictly monitor compliance with, and assist their suppliers
to comply
with, national labour laws and the Disney Code. Instead of simply
cutting
and running whenever violations are uncovered, the company should
work with
non-compliant factories to improve working conditions and labour
practices.
6. Disclose all information on its suppliers for public scrutiny.
The authors of the report are
not disclosing the names of the factories
investigated at this time in order to ensure that Disney or its
suppliers
do not use the report to penalize the contracting factories thus
doubly
victimizing the workers. The CIC will continue to monitor the
factories
and consider taking stronger actions if factory conditions remain
unchanged.
Specific Findings:
1. Wages:
Most workers interviewed were
receiving between US$49-85 a month,
including pay for overtime. Given the long hours they worked,
this was
less than the legal minimum wage. In the toy factories, most workers
were
paid US$37-61 a month. Many workers were being paid on a piece
rate basis,
and most of their overtime work was not fully compensated. Many
factories
were not providing payroll slips, and where slips were provided,
they were
often unclear on how pay was calculated. It is common for factories
to pay
workers a month in arrears. Some pay two months in arrears.
2. Hours of Work:
In peak season, working hours
can be as long as 13-17 hours a day, seven
days a week, for months at a stretch. In some factories, workers
are
pressured to work overnight. Workers can not refuse to work overtime.
In
one factory, a worker interviewed in August said that, except
for the
four-day holiday over Chinese New Year, he had only had two day
off this
year.
3. Food and Housing:
Overcrowded dormitories with
10, 12, or 14 workers sharing a single room
is common. In one factory, 21-24 workers shared a single dorm
room,
sleeping on triple-decker bunk beds. In some dormitories, the
corridor
between the two rows of beds was not wide enough for two workers
to pass
each other. Overcrowding creates a serious fire hazard. Complaints
about
factory canteen food were common. In one factory, workers described
the
food as being "worse than pig feed."
4. Health and Safety:
Workers are generally unaware
of health and safety issues. Some workers
complained that management only distributed gloves and masks when
guests
visited the factory. Some workers complained of frequent sore
throats. In
one factory, workers complained about the bad smell of the paints
in the
spraying section.
5. Fines and Fees:
Workers reported being fined
for talking at work, reporting to work late,
taking leave without permission, forgetting to switch lights off
in
dormitories during the day time, littering in the canteen, etc.
In one
factory workers said that if they were caught smoking in the peak
production period, they would receive a financial fine, but in
the low
season they would be fined and fired. In one factory workers have
to pay a
fee when they start work to cover costs for a temporary residential
pass
and their factory uniform. In another factory, workers have to
pay for
tools, uniforms and the factory ID card.
6. Social Security:
In violation of Chinese law,
most factories do not participate in that
country's social security system, thus denying workers the benefits
they
deserve in event of retirement, occupational injury or death.
7. Freedom of Association:
There were no unions in any
of the factories investigated, and most
workers interviewed were not aware of what a union is. In one
factory,
workers reported that there had been a strike in the spring because
wages
were in arrears. Management eventually released the wages owed,
but all
the workers who had participated in the strike were fired. In
a second
factory, workers reported that had been several strikes, most
of them over
late payment of wages. Male workers who participated in a strike
in April
were fired. Despite the number of strikes that had taken place
at the
factory, workers interviewed did not know what a union was, and
thought
the word "union" might mean a morning assembly. In a
third factory, a
security guard who circulated a petition protesting the poor quality
of
the food at the factory canteen was immediately fired.
8. Job Security:
In October, more than half the
workers at one factory were asked to take a
long unpaid leave. According to the workers interviewed, this
is the same
as being fired. When new orders are placed, management reportedly
writes
to the workers and asks them to return to work. However, workers
rehired
are treated as new employees. In another factory, workers report
that if a
worker chooses to resign, she has to sacrifice wages owing and
is not
allowed to retrieve her personal belongings from the dormitory.
At least
one factory illegally subcontracts Disney orders to other factories.
Disney Code and Monitoring Program
1. Awareness of Code:
Most workers interviewed were
not aware of the Disney code of conduct. In
only three of the factories was the code posted. Workers who had
heard of
or seen the code were usually unaware of its content or purpose.
Very few
realized that the code was intended to protect their rights.
2. Monitoring:
Workers interviewed spoke of
visitors to the factories, but generally had
no idea who the visitors were - buyers, Disney representatives,
Disney
monitors, officials from the labour bureau? None of the workers
interviewed had spoken to the visitors or seen other workers speak
to the
visitors. They reported being afraid to talk to visitors because
there was
no guarantee they wouldn't be punished for doing so.
3. Management Tricks:
Workers from two factories reported
that their factories were cleaned up
before visitors arrived. Workers in three factories reported double
bookkeeping that misrepresented workers wages, the falsification
of
timecards to hide overtime hours worked, and/or workers being
forced to
sign false payroll statements. In two factories, workers were
given a set
of model answers and trained how to respond to questions from
visitors.
Workers from one of those factories said they would be fined if
they
didn't answer the questions "properly." Workers from
a third factory said
they were warned by management not to say anything negative about
the
factory to visitors. In one factory, workers reported that "young"
workers
were removed from the factory before visitors arrived.
Previous CIC Studies on Disney
In February 1999, the CIC released
a report entitled "Mulan's Sisters:
Working for Disney is no Fairly Tale." The report documented
similar
worker rights violations in four Disney supply factories in southern
China. Disney appears to have stopped placing orders with three
of the
factories. For this reason, CIC will not release the names of
the
factories that are the focus of this current report. Rather than
cutting
and running whenever labour rights violations are uncovered, which
only
further victimizes the workers whose rights are being violated,
Disney
should work with its contractors to bring them into compliance
with
Chinese labour law and the Disney code of conduct.
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