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Cambodia hikes clothing workers’ minimum wage

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PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Cambodia announced Thursday it will raise the minimum wage for clothing workers by 9.4 percent to $140 a month, hoping to ease tensions in the country’s main export industry.

A Labor Ministry statement said the government was increasing the wages on instructio­ns from Prime Minister Hun Sen after eight days of tense negotiatio­ns in a committee representi­ng employers, workers and the government.

The new wages take effect at the beginning of next year. The increase falls short of the $160 a month wage proposed by unions.

Three years ago, a union campaign to double the then-minimum wage of $80 in the textile, garment and footwear industries resulted in clashes with police and a crackdown on public protests. A $100 level was set for 2014 and $128 this year but tensions over wages remained high.

In early 2014, at least four people were killed and more than 20 were injured when police outside Cambodia’s capital opened fire to break up a protest by striking garment workers.

The clothing and foot wear industry is Cambodia’s biggest export earner, employing about 700,000 people in more than 700 garment and shoe factories. In 2014, the Southeast Asian country shipped more than $6 billion worth of products to the United States and Europe.

But like in other developing countries in the region such as Bangladesh and Vietnam that rely heavily on their garment industries, wages in Cambodia remain low by internatio­nal standards.

“I am not satisfied with this new wage,” said Ath Thorn, the president of the Coalition of Cambodian Apparel Workers’ Democratic Union, who took part in the negotiatio­ns. “I think the net salary of each garment worker should be at least $150 per month not $140 as cited by the Labor Ministry,” he said.

The Labor Ministry’s statement said that when other benefits were calcu- lated, the workers would be making an average of $157 to $168 monthly next year.

In a statement, the Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on acknowledg­ed the efforts by all parties to reach a consensus.

“As wages gradually increase, it is important for the industry to improve overall productivi­ty, and for garment buyers to examine their purchasing practices,” the statement said.

Labor militancy is unnerving for Cambodia’s government, especially because major unions are generally allied with the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party, whose political strength has been growing in recent years. (AP)

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