M&V factory workers halted all traffic on National
Road 2 during a protest in Phnom Penh on Wednesday. Photograph: Vireak
Mai/Phnom Penh Post
Continuing its efforts to quell an increasing number of strikes in the
Kingdom’s lucrative garment sector, the government this week issued a
directive aimed at giving provincial and municipal governors powers to
resolve issues at factories without calling on ministries in Phnom Penh.
“To ensure further contributions to economic growth and to
solve problems for the people, the government gives [municipal] and
provincial governors more duties,” states the directive, signed by
Prime Minister Hun Sen on Monday and obtained yesterday.
Under
the changes, provincial authorities have powers to monitor the
productivity of their local factories, examine worksites, solve
industrial disputes and maintain public order when workers strike.
The Labour and Social Affairs ministries have previously exclusively carried out such duties.
Chea
Mony, president of the Free Trade Union, called the directive
“meaningful”, but said he believed only the Ministry of Labour should
deal with strikes.
“Some officials enflame disputes, which leads to violent crackdowns,” he said.
During
a speech on Wednesday in Kandal province’s Ang Snuol district, which is
home to 38 garment factories, Prime Minister Hun Sen urged garment
workers to refrain from striking or risk factories departing for more
stable markets.
Dave Welsh, country manager for labour-rights
group Solidarity Center/ACILS, said giving provincial authorities more
powers seemed to be a step in the right direction.
Welsh said his
organisation had been asking the government to give more authorities
the power to deal aggressively with factories who had falsely declared
themselves bankrupt.
“If owners are fleeing . . . there should be criminal sanctions.”
Ken
Loo, secretary-general of the Garment Manufacturers Association in
Cambodia, said decentralisation should “in theory” speed up the
decision-making process when it came to dealing with issues such as
workers blocking national roads.
“We often hear [from
authorities] that ‘we are waiting for instructions’,” he said. “There
will no longer be a need to wait for solutions from the central
government."
Additional reporting by Shane Worrell
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