The Phnom Penh Post

Government called on to halt ‘judicial politicisa­tion’

- Kong Meta

SIX global union federation­s on Monday issued a joint statement calling on the government to drop charges against local union leaders over involvemen­t in a series of minimum wage protests between 2013 and last year.

The six federation­s are the Building and Wood Workers’ Internatio­nal (BWI); Internatio­nal Union of Food, Agricultur­e, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco and Allied Workers’ Associatio­n (IUF); Public Service Internatio­nal (PSI); UNI Global Union; Internatio­nal Domestic Workers’ Federation (IDWF); and Internatio­nal Transport Federation (ITF).

Currently, Free Trade Union (FTU) president Chea Mony, Coalition of Cambodian Apparel Workers Democratic Union (CCAWDU) president Ath Thorn, Cambodian Alliance of Trade Unions (CATU) president Yang Sohorn, Collective Union of Movement of Workers (CUMW) president Pav Sina, and Cambodian Confederat­ion of Unions (CCU) president Rong Chhun are facing longstandi­ng charges.

The union leaders were sued by factory owners and government officials over their intent to commit violence and other charges stemming from the n a t i o n wi d e s t r i k e s o v e r the minimum wage.

BWI Asia-Pacific Regional representa­tive Apolinar Tolentino said there is no evidence suggesting the leaders had called for, caused, provoked or condoned such actions.

“[The claims] clearly demonstrat­e politicisa­tion of the judiciary in [Hun Sen’s] Cambodia,” he claimed.

IUF acting regional secretary Hidayat Greenfield said: “Garment manufactur­ers appear to [take advantage] of the politicise­d judicial system in harassing trade unionists and lodging baseless claims against individual­s known to have taken part in the protests.”

UNI regional secretary Chris Ng said: “We are demanding that the charges against these union leaders be immediatel­y dropped and that the [Cambodian] government involves the independen­t leaders in new discussion­s on achieving meaningful minimum wage rises and genuine collective bargaining.”

Ath Thorn, who is also the president of the Cambodian Labour Confederat­ion (CLC), lauded the joint statement.

“We are happy that there are internatio­nal voices pushing the government to drop the charges. I sent documents to the Labour Ministry last week, asking for an interventi­on,” Thorn said.

He said he had been summoned to appear for questionin­g pertaining to a protest on the capital’s Veng Sreng Boulevard. “I hope there will be a positive [result],” he said.

C A T U p r e s i d e n t Y a n g Sophorn hoped for local and internatio­nal support in advocating workers’ rights.

“We wish to be encouraged a nd suppor ted, not bei ng served with lawsuits, because we work for t he benef it of workers,” she said.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? Union leader Ath Thorn attends a minimum wage demonstrat­ion on Phnom Penh’s Veng Sreng Boulevard in 2015.
HENG CHIVOAN Union leader Ath Thorn attends a minimum wage demonstrat­ion on Phnom Penh’s Veng Sreng Boulevard in 2015.

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