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Clonmany man slates 'slave'
factories
13.08.07
A CLONMANY man who
fights for the rights of 'slave' textiles workers
has hit out at the conditions endured by Asian
workers making clothes for the Kate Moss range at
Topshop. |
Neil Kearney, the
general secretary of the International Textile,
Garment and Leather Workers Federation (ITGLWF), was
commenting as part of a major exposé on the labour
used to supply billionaire Sir Philip Green's
massive retail empire including Topshop, Arcadia,
Burton and Dorothy Perkins.
The 'Sunday Times' investigation revealed that such
factories employ hundreds of Sri Lankan, Indian and
Bangladeshi workers in Mauritius where they labour |
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for up to 12 hours a
day, six days a week, for as little as €6 a day.
Workers told reporters they were recruited in their
home countries by self-employed agents who promised
wages up to five times what they receive. They pay
up to £725 to get the job, equivalent to seven
months’ earnings but once in Mauritius "they receive
as little as 22p to 40p an hour, about 40% below the
local average wage".
Mr. Kearney said the the low wages and long hours
amounted to “slave labour”.
“Because of the economic conditions of a country
like Mauritius, companies are unable to attract
local labour," he told the paper.
"Instead they recruit migrant workers, who pay a
significant fee for the job. Many migrant workers
who go to work in these garment factories are like
slaves.”
Fifty-seven year old Kearney, who is married with
two children and based in Brussels, emigrated to Britain
at the age of 17 in search of work. He took a
position with the National Westminster Bank and
joined the National Union of Bank Employees on his
first day.
In 1972, he took a job with the National Union of
Tailors and Garment Workers and the following year
was appointed information officer. Four years later,
he became head of the information and research
department.
He has served as an adviser to the British Economic
Development Committee for the Clothing Industry and
was a member of the TUC's Textile, Clothing and
Footwear Industries' committee from 1976 to 1988.
He was a Labour Party candidate for the British
Parliament in the February and October 1974 general
elections and was elected councillor in the Royal
Borough of Kensington and Chelsea in London in 1978.
As ITGLWF chief, he has visited more than 140
different countries worldwide and has seen the
ITGLWF membership grow from 5.3 million to 9 million
workers in 130 countries worldwide. |
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