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WSWS : Workers Struggles : North America

American retailers involved in sweatshop racketeering on US-Pacific
territory

By Cory Johnson
19 January 1999

Three lawsuits filed January 13 in California state court on behalf of
50,000 foreign garment workers charge major US retailers with "racketeering
conspiracy" for producing clothing with indentured labor under sweatshop
conditions on the island of Saipan in the Northern Mariana Islands, a US
Commonwealth in the South Pacific.

The suits seek $1 billion in damages, including unpaid wages against 18 US
retailers and manufacturers. Among them are The Gap, Tommy Hilfiger, Sears,
Wal-Mart, Oshkosh B'Gosh, Lord and Taylor's, Hecht's and Mervyn's. Another
22 garment factories, owned by Chinese and South Korean capitalists, are
charged with failing to pay overtime and other violations.

Saipan products carry the "Made in the USA" label, supposedly indicating to
consumers a certain degree of regulation by law and quality of working
conditions. But under a process overseen by US retailers and guarded by
Congress huge profits have been reaped under severe exploitation.

Workers, predominantly women from China, the Philippines, Bangladesh and
Thailand, paid $2,000 to $7,000 to recruiters anticipating they would
receive high-paying jobs in the United States. Many signed "shadow
contracts," waving basic human rights, including the prerogative to marry
or date.

They were forced to labor 12-hour days, seven days a week, without overtime
compensation. In some cases workers worked up to 20 hours a week "off the
clock." In the last five years the factories have been cited for 1,000 OSHA
violations, many capable of causing injury or death. Codes of conduct are
posted, but in English, which workers cannot read. Extreme heat conditions
in the factories commonly caused workers to faint.

When not on the job workers are crowded up to eight people to a room in
barbed wire-enclosed barracks supervised by guards. The food that workers
had to buy was bug-infested. Opposition to conditions is countered with
threats of firing, physical abuse and deportation.

Carmencita Abad, originally from the Philippines, labored for six years in
Saipan and was fired for trying to form a union and aid Chinese coworkers.
"If they complain," she said, "Chinese workers can be beaten or punished.
This abuse occurs while US retailers watch. I have seen many times the Gap
inspector come into the factory, look at the garments and fabric, then turn
and walk out the door."

"Unfortunately, slavery and indentured servitude is alive and well in the
many parts of the world, including the United States," declared William S.
Lerach, one of the lead attorneys on the case. "Companies like The Gap and
Wal-Mart have reaped millions in profits from this scheme--now they will be
held accountable." Al Meyerhoff, another lead attorney, said, "To allow
such squalid conditions to persist on American soil is both patently
unlawful and morally reprehensible. Saipan is America's worst sweatshop."

The moving of foreign factories onto the US territory of Saipan allowed US
retailers to avoid more than $200 million in duties on $1 billion in
garments. By relocating to Saipan the foreign interests have avoided import
restrictions. Chinese production in Saipan is believed to have exceeded its
import quota by 250 percent in 1997 alone.

Today, so-called "guest" workers comprise over 90 percent of the garment
industry work force in the Marianas. In turn this work force constitutes
more than half of the Marianas total population of 70,000. The racketeering
conspiracy is made possible by the island's exemption from US immigration
and minimum wage laws.

See Also:
Northern Marianas workers testify in Washington
Sweatshop abuses in US island territory
[2 April 1998]
Police and union officials mount frame-up of dissident textile workers in
India
[22 August 1998]

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WSWS : News & Analysis : Europe : Spain

Nine months after toxic waste devastated marshlands in southern Spain

World scientists meet to discuss Coto de Do�ana disaster

By Vicky Short
19 January 1999

Nine months after the ecological disaster that hit Europe's biggest natural
park, the Coto de Do�ana in the south of Spain, 60 scientists from Europe,
the US, Chile and South Africa met to discuss how to treat the heavy metals
remaining in the area. Sponsored by the European Foundation for Science and
the Scientific Investigations High Council--Consejo Superior de
Investigaciones Cient'ficas (CSIC)--they held a four-day conference in a
Seville hotel.

On April 2, 1998, a dyke wall gave way at a reservoir used for dumping
poisonous chemicals, owned by the mining company Boliden Ltd. Seven million
tonnes of toxic sludge poured into the Aznalc�llar mines' surrounding area,
which adjoins Coto de Do�ana . The 50-metre breach released a massive wave
of toxic waste, with a front 500 metres long. It flattened and killed
everything in its path as it flowed into the River Guadimar at a speed of 1
km per hour. The wave moved downstream in rivers and man-made channels to
the Gulf of Cadiz. Nothing survived because of the high acidity of the
waste, which contained a mixture of lead, copper, zinc, cadmium and other
metals, along with sulphides.

In its first year of operation in 1997, Boliden Ltd, a Toronto-based
company that moved to Canada from Sweden two years ago, produced 180,000
tonnes of zinc, lead, copper and silver from 4 million tonnes of ore.

In their conclusions, the scientists warn of the difficulties of applying
any treatment to a 25-mile area due to diverse soils, air exposure and
concentration of the contaminants. Victor Lorenzo, one of the CSIC
investigators, said, "We have never dealt with a problem of this
magnitude." He added that the problem of eliminating the heavy metals
remaining in the banks and the riverbed of the Guadimar has no immediate
solution, although it is feasible in the coming years.

The scientists identified the biggest nightmare as the treatment of
arsenic, for which there is presently no means of extraction. To overcome
this problem they intend to experiment with genetically modified plants,
converting the River Guadimar valley into a natural laboratory, where the
best experts in soil decontamination will apply biotechnological
innovations.

The usual treatment for soil contamination is a combination of bacteria and
plants which "suck up" the contaminants. One of the CSIC reports
recommended the sowing of different types of 'brasica', a plant
characterised by its capacity to extract several of the metals from the
sludge such as lead, zinc, copper and cadmium. These and other similar
plants used, however, are incapable of extracting arsenic.

Arsenic can appear in as many as seven highly toxic chemical combinations.
The scientists' report makes clear that "there is an urgent need to develop
technologies which don't yet exist but which can be possible to develop".
In the past few years, new genetic techniques have been developed that have
aided soil decontamination specialists. Optimism exists, after a gene was
implanted in the poplar tree which has succeeded in enabling it to extract
from the soil a highly toxic chemical type of mercury and transforming it
into another inoffensive type, which then dissolves in the air.

The scientists expressed their hope that if the investigation in the
Guadimar valley is channelled in this direction, they will be able to
develop genetically modified plants specialised in the extraction of
arsenic within the next three years. However, Gijs Kuenen, professor at the
University of Delft (Holland), warned at a press conference that the
extraction of arsenic is a "long-term question which has no 100 percent
solution".

The full extent of the arsenic contamination is not yet known. According to
the data given by the Boliden company, it is calculated that around 40,000
tonnes of arsenic reached the Guadimar riverbed. While 10 million tonnes of
sludge have been excavated so far, experts warn that environmental exposure
has accelerated the filtering of the heavy metals deep into the subsoil,
making it impossible to dig out. As well as this, nine months later a
percentage of the arsenic, zinc and lead embedded in the river will now
have a different structure. Exposure to the air produces chemical
reactions, in which the intervention of oxygen in an acidic environment
converts sulphides into sulphates, making them more soluble and mobile.

This poses the problem of where to put the "sucking" plants, taking into
consideration the mobility of the metals, the rate of mobility, and natural
elements such as heavy rains, etc. In order to measure this the experts
will use another invention of molecular biology: a bacteria whose DNA has
been reconstructed to enable it to emit light when it enters into contact
with the heavy metals. Greater brightness will indicate a larger mobility.

"This is all part of a grand experiment," said Kuenen. The scientists will
be meeting again in a year's time to discuss the implications of advances
in the application of biogenetic techniques in their task of
decontaminating the Guadiamar valley.

While the Spanish press marvels at these undoubtedly amazing scientific
experiments and discoveries, scores of people involved in mining, fishing
and agriculture have lost their means of subsistence and are exposed daily
to terrible health hazards as a result of this disaster. The consequences
of eating, drinking and breathing these toxic metals for future generations
are incalculable. A major natural park has been all but destroyed. Many
parts of this area of natural beauty will never be regenerated. Birds, rare
anywhere else in Europe, and other valuable animals have either died, or
migrated.

Economic considerations and profit motives gave rise to this catastrophe.
For years the owners ignored repeated warnings that the dam was unsafe and
continued to pour toxic waste into it.

Even today Boliden Ltd are making every effort to recommence operations,
bypassing safety considerations. January 12 the Do�ana National Park Trust
(Patronato del Parque Nacional de Do�ana) unanimously rejected an
application by the company to reopen the Aznalc�llar mines, which have been
closed since the disaster. The company project proposed sealing the damaged
reservoir, which still contains 80 percent of the water and toxic waste
held before the dams breach, and reopening an open-cast mine 1 kilometre
away to damp the mine's future toxic waste. Currently, this area is acting
as the depository for all the sludge removed from the river.

In turning down the project, the trust stated that it did "not guarantee
that a similar accident may not occur in the future". They objected to the
lack of assurances as to the impermeability of the new reservoir, the lack
of information on fundamental aspects of air and water safety and the
absence of any plan for dealing with emergencies and catastrophes. The
trust also said that the company had failed to produce documents relating
to emergency work carried out on the dyke and further cited the lack of any
plans to continuously monitor the sealed reservoir over the required
100-year minimum period.

The Swedish-Canadian multinational arrogantly responded that if it is not
given an alternative to the use of the open cast mine, its operations "will
be closed 100 percent", stating that no "economically and physically
viable" alternatives were available. It also ruled out the possibility of
constructing a new reservoir elsewhere.

For its part, the Socialist Party's immediate concern, as expressed by its
mayor, Francisco M�rquez, is to push for the reopening of the mining
operation--apparently at any cost. He announced that he would seek to
mobilise the people of Aznalc�llar, the majority of whom worked for the
mine, behind this demand.

See Also:
Cancer and Industrial Pollution
[WSWS full coverage]
Toxic waste devastates marshlands in southern Spain
[13 May 1998]

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