Saturday, July 14, 2012

Cambodian workers on £10 a week making Olympics 'fanwear’

Adidas, the sportswear company, is facing an investigation over claims that Cambodian workers are being paid £10 a week in basic wages to make official merchandise for the London Olympics.

It is one of the 2012 Games' largest sponsors, believed to have invested £100 million, and manufactured the official Team GB outfit designed by Stella McCartney.

But at the company's Shen Zhou factory on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capital, The Daily Telegraph discovered that poor machinists were working up to 10 hours a day, six days a week, to produce the official Olympics merchandise that thousands of fans will buy in stores throughout Britain.

 Living in squalid conditions, workers said they earned a basic salary of $61 (£40) a month for working eight hours a day, six days a week, plus a $5 allowance for health care. They said they could take their wages up to $120 (£78) by increasing their hours to 10 per day. Full story...

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  3. The great London Olympic greenwash...
  4. Campaign launched in Switzeralnd for exploited Asian “fashion victims”
  5. Migrant workers from India face a hard reality in Singapore...
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  7. Stone washed jeans deadly for many textile workers...

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