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Joe Shlabotnik

(5,604 posts)
Thu Jan 23, 2014, 07:59 PM Jan 2014

Guatemala Factory Supplying Walmart and Other US Retailers Stole $6 Million From Workers

A factory company that made clothes for at least sixty American labels, including Macy’s, JCPenney, Kohl’s and Walmart, allegedly owes Guatemalan workers more than $6 million in back wages and benefits, according to an investigation by the Institute for Global Labour and Human Rights.

Investigators obtained more than 200 internal documents smuggled out of Alianza Fashion factory last spring, including invoices, pay stubs and manufacturing instructions from some of the most well-known brands in the world. The factory, owned by South Korean national Boon Chong Park, went out of business last March.

The report also takes swipes at the Guatemalan government, criticizing it for not seizing Park’s wealth and assets and returning it to his workers. The authors write, “The Government of Guatemala, with its weak labor laws, is also increasingly open to corruption. On the labor front, there has been no progress to implement fundamental worker rights.”
More detail at: http://www.thenation.com/blog/178061/guatemala-factory-supplying-walmart-and-other-retailers-stole-6-million-workers
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Guatemala Factory Supplying Walmart and Other US Retailers Stole $6 Million From Workers (Original Post) Joe Shlabotnik Jan 2014 OP
It's doubtful almost all U.S. Americans realized this problem exists in Guatemala! Judi Lynn Jan 2014 #1
Guatemala: maquila stole $6 million from workers Judi Lynn Feb 2014 #2

Judi Lynn

(160,542 posts)
1. It's doubtful almost all U.S. Americans realized this problem exists in Guatemala!
Fri Jan 24, 2014, 05:09 PM
Jan 2014

What little has been available here has usually concerned the endangered lives of the citizens who have toiled under desperate circumstances producing agricultural items for U.S. American tables, all these long years.

Some U.S. Americans have been aware of grotesque sweatshop conditions in Honduras, also for U.S. customers' special shopping pleasures.

It really is important to learn this has also been happening in Guatemala, and it's tremendous you caught this information and shared it.

Guatemala has suffered so intensely officially since the US under Eisenhower overthrew the democratically elected President Jacobo Arbenz, and bled, and grieved throughout decimation of hundreds of thousands of Guatemalans in the years following.

It's about time the Americas caught a break, isn't it? Guatemalan citizens have lived in pain so long, so that thoughtless, greedy people could get their soft, pudgy, thin-skinned hands on more money, and continue their lifelong waddle toward greater and greater wealth.

Judi Lynn

(160,542 posts)
2. Guatemala: maquila stole $6 million from workers
Wed Feb 5, 2014, 06:55 PM
Feb 2014

Guatemala: maquila stole $6 million from workers
Submitted by Weekly News Update... on Tue, 01/28/2014 - 09:13 Central America Theater

Over the course of 12 years management at the Alianza Fashion apparel factory in the central Guatemalan department of Chimaltenango cheated employees out of some $6 million dollars in back wages and benefits, according to a report released Jan. 23 by Pittsburgh-based Institute for Global Labor and Human Rights (IGLHR, formerly the National Labor Committee). The maquiladora—a tax-exempt assembly plant producing for export—stitched items like suits and jackets for at least 60 US retailers, including Macy's, JCPenney, Kohl's and Wal-Mart. The owner, South Korean national Boon Chong Park, shut the factory down in March 2013.

The report is based on more than 200 documents--including pay stubs, invoices and manufacturing specifications—that were smuggled out of the plant last spring. According to the IGLHR, the documents show that while the plant usually employed from 1,050 to 1,500 workers, the company only made the legally required contributions for pensions and healthcare for 65 workers from 2001 to 2013. The total lost benefits came to more than $4.7 million. When Alianza closed down, the company failed to pay the 548 workers still employed there the $1.2 million it owed them in back wages and benefits. Base pay at the plant was $1.05 an hour, about the same as the minimum wage for the maquiladora sector in 2013, 65.63 quetzales (US$8.36) a day. In 2010 the company fired 60 workers without severance pay after they formed an independent union and registered it with the government.

The North American companies that had their goods produced at Alianza have tried to play down their connection to the plant; spokespeople said the companies hadn't placed orders recently, or they insisted that the orders were placed through third parties. The Phillips-Van Heusen company has donated $100,000 to a fund for the 548 workers left out of work when the plant closed, but as of Jan. 23 other North American companies had failed to respond to requests that they make similar contributions. (Prensa Libre, Guatemala, Dec. 26; ABC News, Jan. 23; The Nation, Dec. 23; Univision, Jan. 24)

Shortly after the company closed last March, some 800 of the former workers occupied the plant to demand payment of back wages, apparently without success. They also complained that they had been underpaid during the year leading up to the closure, and that managers routinely subjected them to racist insults. (Prensa Libre, April 1, 2013)

http://ww4report.com/node/12964

(Short article, no more at link.)

(Not only stole employee's earned, but inadequate salaries, but targeted them for race hatred. Why are we not surprised?)

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