English.news.cn 2014-02-25 15:44:51
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PHNOM
PENH, Feb. 25 (Xinhua) -- Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen said Tuesday
that the opposition-aligned unions, inciting garment workers to stage
strikes for higher wages, must take responsibilities for any future
closures of factories.
"The
government has worked very hard to attract investors to build factories
and has urged manufacturers to increase wages for workers every year,"
he said during the inauguration of a coal- fired power plant in Preah
Sihanouk province.
"We
wait and see if any factories close doors due to demonstrations or
strikes demanding higher wages," the prime minister said. "When
investors close factories, (unemployed) workers should hold protests
against those inciting unions and demand those inciters to find jobs for
them."
The minimum monthly wage for Cambodian garment workers is 100 U. S. dollars.
"Currently,
the wages for our garment workers are higher than those of Laos,
Bangladesh, India, Nepal and Myanmar," Hun Sen said.
The
prime minister's remarks came after a coalition of 18
opposition-aligned trade unions and associations have incited garment
and footwear workers to boycott working overtime since Monday to demand a
160 U.S. dollars minimum wage and the release of 21 detained
protesters.
The
overtime strike would last until Friday this week, said Pav Sina,
president of the Collective Union of Movement of Workers, adding that
the unions would continue to lead a stay-at-home strike from March 12 to
19 if the demands are not met.
The
garment and shoe industry comprises more than 900 factories employing
about 600,000 workers. The sector is the kingdom's largest foreign
exchange earner that generated some 5.53 billion U. S. dollars in
revenues last year.
Van
Sou Ieng, president of the Garment Manufacturers Association of
Cambodia, warned Friday that if the trade union group still plans to
lead an outlawed strike next month to demand a 160 U.S. dollars wage,
about 80 percent of the factories in the country would be closed, while
some would be moved to other countries.
Last
round of garment worker strikes, which began in late December and early
January, had turned violent and left 4 protesters dead and 21
protesters still detained. Since then, the government has temporarily
banned all forms of rallies or demonstrations to restore security and
public order.
Editor: chengyang
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