Photo: Solidarity kitchens support workers through Sri Lanka's crisis (FTZ&GSEU).
Dear friends, Skyrocketing prices in many garment producing countries have had a devastating impact on workers, where even minimal increases in national minimum wages are not enough to pay for basic necessities. In this network update, we share news from Sri Lanka highlighting the urgent need to support workers’ incomes and rights during the country’s economic and political crisis. Decreased consumer demand in the U.S. and global supply chain disruptions, along with global brands’ continued focus on profit maximization, has motivated many major brands to cancel or temporarily suspend orders. This has led to recent mass layoffs and factory closures in many garment-producing regions, including Central America. Our partners in Central America continue to promote and defend the rights of maquila workers despite numerous challenges. Of particular concern is shrinking political space, with the extended state of emergency in El Salvador, further politically motivated closures of civil society organizations in Nicaragua, and rampant impunity in Guatemala. As the hurricane season intensifies, people in the region have already experienced widespread flooding and damage to homes and infrastructure that has resulted in evacuations, roadblocks, and the suspension of operations in at least one garment factory. To help ensure workers’ rights are protected through crises such as these and ongoing devastation caused by the global pandemic, MSN continues to play an active role in the global #PayYourWorkers campaign, currently targeting adidas. The campaign has been ramping up over the past couple of months, with letter writing and actions in stores and on social media. In the wake of a September 2022 report documenting endemic safety hazards in Pakistani garment factories, MSN is joining with Pakistani unions, the Clean Clothes Campaign and other international allies in calling for the expansion of the International Accord for Health and Safety beyond Bangladesh to Pakistan. As Mexico fully transitions to its new labour justice tribunals, MSN profiles one of six important recent victories in which workers have won the right to be represented by an independent, democratic union. Below we profile the August 31 union representation election at VU Manufacturas maquila factory in Piedras Negras, Coahuila. We also share the Canadian Network on Corporate Accountability’s (CNCA) newly launched “non-negotiable” website which promotes the networks’ efforts to enact mandatory human rights and environmental due diligence legislation in Canada. Finally, at the end of July, MSN was deeply saddened by the unexpected news that our friend and defender of garment workers’ rights in the Philippines, Cecilia Viscayno Tuico, passed away. We include more about her work in our tribute below. Thank you for your continued interest and support for our work. We will keep you posted on these issues and others affecting garment workers, trade unions, and labour rights organizations. Lynda Yanz, for the MSN team
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