The Phnom Penh Post

Top H&M suppliers called out

- Ananth Baliga and Bun Sengkong

FOUR premium suppliers for Swedish clothing giant H&M have been called out by a local labour rights group for their continued use of short-term contracts, hampering employees’ ability to unionise and, in one case, allegedly paying workers less than the $140 monthly minimum wage.

In a report titled When ‘best’ is far from good enough and released on Friday, labour rights NGO Central surveyed 38 workers from four suppliers for H&M – three rated “platinum” and one “gold”, factory categories the multinatio­nal uses to rate supplier compliance to labour standards and laws.

Citing H&M’s own commitment­s to ensure workers are paid a fair living wage, the report says that even its “top ranked” and “preferred” factories were falling short of industry averages.

For instance, while the three platinum suppliers – Eastex Garment Co and Seduno Investment Cambo Fashion in Phnom Penh, and Vanco Industrial in Kandal – were found to be paying workers on average $172 a month, more than the minimum wage, the figure was still below the industry average of $178 per month.

However, starting this year, the fourth supplier – M&V Internatio­nal in Phnom Penh – was allegedly failing to even pay the $140 minimum stipulated by law. While it had been paying workers above the industry average as of mid-2015, work stoppages stemming from falling orders this year – during which workers were allegedly not paid, in violation of the Labour Law – forced average wages as low as $136 a month.

Carin Leffler, urgent appeals coor- dinator at Netherland-based Clean Clothes Campaign, which has long criticised brands’ management of their supply chains, called upon “H&M to immediatel­y secure orders at M&V and take concrete steps to ensure considerab­ly higher wages for workers in their Cambodian factories”.

The Central report also found other breaches of H&M’s commitment­s. Workers at the three platinum factories were docked from $2.50 to $15 for coming five to 10 minutes late to work – disciplina­ry measures that H&M supposedly does not permit. It found continued use of two- to six-month short-term contracts at Eastex and Vanco, despite H&M’s assurance that workers who had achieved two years of seniority would get undetermin­ed duration contracts.

Neither the Labour Ministry nor the four factories could be reached for comment yesterday.

When presented with the findings, H&M did not address specific concerns raised by the report, instead only saying it was working with various stakeholde­rs to improve its supply chain. “The report raises important issues which we work on every day and in all the markets we buy our products from,” a spokespers­on for the company said via email.

Ath Thorn, president of Coalition of Cambodian Apparel Workers Democratic Union, said he hadn’t read the report, but that M&V should compensate workers if they were paid below the minimum wage.

He added that the prevalent use of short-term contracts “was not surprising”, and was a result of lax enforcemen­t of the Labour Law.

 ?? VIREAK MAI ?? An employee leaves a Phnom Penh factory in 2013 where H&M garments were being produced.
VIREAK MAI An employee leaves a Phnom Penh factory in 2013 where H&M garments were being produced.

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