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24-Aug-2005
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Thursday, 28
October 2004, 10:39 am
Press Release: International Confederation Of Free Trade Unions
Cambodia: murderers of prominent trade union leaders
enjoy impunity, says ICFTU
Brussels, 27th October 2004 (ICFTU Online): The
International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) today charged
Cambodia's government with being "at best unable, and at worst
unwilling" to carry out a proper investigation into the murders of two
prominent trade union leaders that have occurred this year.
The charges came in a 14-page complaint it lodged today
with the Committee on Freedom of Association of the UN's International
Labour Organisation (ILO).
Chea Vichea, President of the Free Trade Union of the
Workers of the Kingdom of Cambodia (FTUWKC) and Ros Sovannareth,
President of the Trinonga Komara Garment Union and a Steering Committee
member of the FTUWKC were killed in broad daylight on 22 January 2004
and 7 May 2004 respectively. Both murders were contract killings.
So far the investigations into their murders raise more
questions than answers and have been heavily criticised by several
independent observers, the ICFTU said. Witnesses have been threatened
and key eye-witnesses to the crimes have disappeared, without giving
testimony to the police. Furthermore, the judicial process has been
biased. Allegations of forced confessions and alibis have been totally
disregarded by the courts.
Conspicuously, there has been no investigation into who
solicited the killings. In the Chea Vichea murder case, the
investigating judge was removed from office after he dropped charges,
for lack of evidence, against the two suspects arrested by the police.
The many shortcomings of the investigation and the lack of proper
judicial process raise serious doubts as to whether the government wants
the real perpetrators to be brought to justice.
The two murders are an example of just how dangerous it
is to exercise trade union activities in Cambodia. Another example is
the assault, on 23 June, on Lay Sophead, the female President of a union
affiliated with the FTUWKC, who was left for dead. Furthermore the
police reportedly used water hoses against 1,700 striking workers in
Sihanoukville in October 2004. Police also interfere in trade union
activities, says the ICFTU. On 18 August 2004, about 40 police officers
tried to stop a trade union seminar for 60 people in the Bakan district
of the Pursat province. They managed to scare off 30 people. The others
had to move into a private house for a two-hour meeting.
In view of the recent wave of police interference,
physical assaults and murders, the ICFTU suspects that incentives for
the Cambodian government to respect international labour standards have
decreased owing to the phasing out of the WTO Agreement on Textiles and
Clothing, which expires at the end of 2004. The end of the quota system
is widely seen as putting the industry's profits at risk and
consequently its very existence. Docile trade unions would clearly make
the lives of factory owners and the government's easier. The increase in
harassment and targeting of trade unionists may therefore not be
coincidental. On the contrary there would appear to be a concerted
attack against trade unionists, carried out in a climate of total
impunity.
In its complaint to the ILO (http://www.icftu.org/displaydocument.asp?Index=991220667&Language=EN),
the ICFTU submits extensive details on the murder investigations and
information on the many threats and attacks on other trade unionists.
The ICFTU represents 148 million workers through its 234 affiliated
national trade union centres in 152 countries and territories. ICFTU is
also a member of Global Unions:
http://www.global-unions.org
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