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Child Labor Behind Firestone Tires
Related to country: Liberia


Child Labor Behind Firestone Tires
by Tim Newman
http://commondreams.org/archive/2007/06/12/1826/

As people around the world commemorate World Day Against Child Labor on June 12, the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company recognized the day by continuing its 81-year tradition of exploiting workers in Liberia.

Firestone has been operating a rubber plantation in Harbel, Liberia since 1926 where workers wake up early every morning to tap rubber trees in order to meet an unreasonably high production quota. By Firestone Natural Rubber CEO Dan Adomitis’ own admission on CNN, it would take a tapper over 21 hours every day to meet their quota, which is why workers are forced to bring their children and wives to work or their already low salaries will be halved. As part of the outdated production system, children carry heavy loads, come into close contact with toxic pesticides and often work for 12 hours a day.

Workers live in shacks, most of which have not been renovated since the 1920s, without any running water, indoor latrines or electricity while managers live on huge land plots with all the modern amenities – including golf courses! As recently confirmed by the Liberian EPA, the company dumps toxic chemicals directly into the Farmington River which is used by the local community for fishing and bathing. As a result of the modern day slavery conditions facing workers, the company has been sued in US courts and was also bestowed with the Public Eye Award for Worst Global Corporation this past January.

In order to stand up for their internationally recognized rights, workers have been organizing to hold new union elections at the end of June so that they can finally be represented by a truly independent and democratic body. When the company management attempted to use legal roadblocks to stop the elections, the workers went on strike in the end of April. On Friday, April 27, police forces were brought in and workers were brutally attacked. Police officials fired tear gas into crowded settlements filled with children, women, the elderly and Firestone workers alike. Six workers were seriously injured and roughly 13 were arrested. The attack on workers’ right to organize raises serious concerns about the neutrality of upcoming union elections.

Negotiations are also currently taking place between Firestone and the government over the terms of the concession area which Firestone controls. The previous concession agreement was signed under a transitional government and heavily favored Firestone. Now that Liberia has a democratic government – and the first woman leader in Africa – there is hope that the new concession agreement will produce greater benefits for the population that produces such immense wealth for Firestone. Unfortunately, reports from the negotiations raise serious concerns about whether or not Firestone is negotiating with the government in good faith.

US consumers should be shocked that the ubiquitous Firestone tires are produced under these exploitative labor conditions. Imagine children as young as 10 years old forced to carry 70 pounds barrels of latex, coming into direct contact with toxic pesticides. The situation on Firestone’s rubber plantation is completely unacceptable under all international legal and moral standards. It is up to consumers to demand that Firestone advance workers’ rights this World Day Against Child Labor instead of rolling them back.

With the concession agreement negotiations taking place and new union elections approaching quickly, the next few weeks present an historic opportunity for the people of Liberia to hold Firestone accountable. More broadly, Firestone in Liberia presents an important case study of how multinationals operate in the Global South. The situation is a microcosm for what is going on around the world – wealthy corporations make huge profits off the extraction of resources from countries like Liberia and exert their power over post-conflict countries during any negotiations. Here in the US, we need to send a strong message that companies like Firestone cannot violate human rights with impunity. That is why the Stop Firestone Coalition is currently planning actions leading up to July 26, Liberia’s Independence Day. We invite readers to join us in these and the many other actions we have planned. Visit the Stop Firestone website and tell Firestone: 80 years of exploitation are enough!

Tim Newman is a Campaigns Assistant at the International Labor Rights Forum, a member of the Stop Firestone Coalition. For more information on the Stop Firestone campaign, please visit the website at http://www.stopfirestone.org. For more information on child labor in other industries, please visit http://www.laborrights.org. He can be reached at tim.newman [at] ilrf.org.

August 13, 2007 | 1:02 PM Comments  1 comments



Philippines Government Travel Blacklist
Related to country: Philippines


Below is a press release from BAYAN USA regarding the travel restrictions placed on a Filipina American professor by the government of the Philippines. There is a strong reason to believe that this case is linked to a previous blacklist that barred international human rights activists from entering the country in December 2006. For more news on that case, place visit http://www.laborrights.org/press/index.html#tuv.


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 10, 2007
Contact: Chito Quijano, Chair, BAYAN USA
chair@bayanusa.org

Philippine Government obstructs Filipina American Professor's scheduled return home to the US, US Government intensifies domestic spying.

Los Angeles, CA - BAYAN-USA, an alliance of progressive Filipino groups across the US, is outraged at the recent holding of Annalisa Enrile, Associate Professor at the University of Southern California and national Chairperson of Gabriela Network USA. Professor Enrile was stopped at the airport and prevented from returning home to California on August 5, 2007. She is a US citizen and is speculated to have been held, because of her involvement with Gabriela Network, a Philippine-US women's solidarity organization based in the US .

"It is coincidental that the Philippine government stopped Professor Enrile's return-flight to the US the same day Bush signed the "Protect America Act of 2007," but it is no coincidence that both Bush and GMA are intent on eradicating what few civil rights we have left" said Chito Quijano, Chair of BAYAN USA.

According to Quijano, "In attempts to silence their critics, Bush and GMA are rushing to repress and criminalize those who speak out. We must be more vigilant and fight for our basic rights or these illegitimate regimes will continue to pull the human and civil rights rugs out from under us."
Initial reports indicate that Professor Enrile was on a "watch-list" developed by the US-backed Arroyo administration to hinder international participation in protests against the ASEAN Summit hosted in the Philippines in January 2007. The Philippine government had assured the international community that the "watch-list" would be lifted following the ASEAN Summit. And despite escalating pressure from the international bodies such as the United Nations and Amnesty International, and the guilty verdict of the Second Permanent People's Tribunal in March to stop the killings and other human rights violations, the US-Arroyo clique fast-tracked the implementation of the Anti-Terror Law, or Human Security Act to begin on July 15, 2007.

The US-authored Human Security Act establishes a dangerously broad definition of terrorism, legalizes warrant-less arrests and wire-tapping, and criminalizes the actions of mass organizations exercising their democratic rights to protest the US-Arroyo clique's acts of state terror. US-based organizations of BAYAN-USA are additionally concerned by the "Protect America Act of 2007" signed by Bush on August 5, 2007. The act amends the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 to allow domestic spying, wire-tapping of any foreign calls coming into the US and forcing all telephone companies to submit data to the federal government. Like the Human Security Act, this "Protect America Act" is dangerously broad; no requirement of a connection to terrorism is necessary to justify this invasion of privacy and erosion of civil liberties. It also is a move to legalize the illegal surveillance already being done by the Bush administration.

Member organizations of BAYAN-USA, are united in the defense of Prof. Enrile's international right to travel and return home to the USA. BAYAN-USA condemns all attacks against human and civil rights now legalized by the Human Security Act and the Protect America Act of 2007. "All people, especially those in the US, must counter these attacks against our human rights. We are inviting all people to save the date and join us on the upcoming international day of action on September 21, 2007 the anniversary of Martial Law."

'Never Again to Martial Law!'
Stop the Killings in the Philippines!
Repeal the Human Security Act!
Stop US Military Aid to Philippine Death Squads.

BAYAN-USA is an alliance of progressive Filipino groups in the U.S. representing organizations of students, scholars, women, workers, and youth. As the only international chapter of Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (BAYAN-Philippines), BAYAN-USA serves as an information bureau for the national democratic movement of the Philippines and as a campaign center for anti-imperialist Filipinos in the U.S.

###

www.bayanusa.org

August 13, 2007 | 12:48 PM Comments  0 comments





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