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INDONESIA: GAP UNION MEMBERS FIRED
posted August 31, 1999

[Prepared jointly by Global Exchange: (415) 255-7296,
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; and Campaign for Labor Rights: (541)
344-5410, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>]

In this alert:
Gap union members fired in Indonesia
Action request
Contact information form

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GAP UNION MEMBERS FIRED IN INDONESIA

The  Indonesian Prosperity Trade Union (SBSI), reports that 835 of its
members have been fired by PT Aneka Garmentama, a clothing manufacturer in
North Jakarta which produces for The Gap and other major U.S. brands. The
SBSI is Indonesia's first successful independent trade union. It represents
835 of the more than 900 workers at the factory.

The workers were dismissed on August 12 after a one-month strike for fair
compensation and after initiating grievance proceedings at the Department of
Manpower. The company notified the workers of the dismissals by fax, saying
that it would rather pay severance to the workers than follow the legal
course of the Manpower proceedings. Although the workers were forced by
economic necessity to accept severance payments, they would much prefer to
have their jobs back and to have their claims addressed.

Prior to their dismissal the workers were seeking:

1. Pay increases, adjusted to the new legal minimum wage
2. Transportation and meal allowances, as mandated by Department of Manpower
standards
3. Freedom of association and collective bargaining (The company had refused
to meet with SBSI mediators.)

The parent company of PT Aneka Garmentama is the Karwel group, which owns 12
factories in Jakarta. Although the factory is wholly Indonesian owned, its
buyers are international clothing labels. They include The Gap, Donna Karen,
Eddie Bauer, Ralph Lauren and Tommy Hilfiger.

The international department of SBSI has contacted Global Exchange and
Campaign for Labor Rights and requests that we mobilize solidarity in
support of the fired workers, with the goal of having them rehired and
getting the factory to address their original demands.

The Gap already is the focus of a major campaign organized by Global
Exchange in response to outrageous sweatshop practices on Saipan by Gap and
other major U.S. clothing companies. Mobilizing support for the fired Gap
workers in Indonesia will become part of the ongoing Gap campaign.
Meanwhile, labor rights advocates also will contact PT Aneka Garmentama's
other major U.S. buyers and urge them to investigate the labor practices of
the factory.

<><><><><>
ACTION REQUEST

Please fill in and return the following information (not this entire alert!)
to Campaign for Labor Rights <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> or fax: (541) 431-0523 so that
you can be included in the sign-on letter to Donald Fisher, Chairman of The
Gap. This letter will be sent on the letterhead of Campaign for Labor
Rights, with the original going to Donald Fisher and cc's to the director of
PT Aneka Garmentama and the Minister of Manpower in Indonesia. We will
accept signatures for the sign-on letter up through September 14.

Please fill in for Gap sign-on letter:
YOUR NAME:
YOUR POSTAL ADDRESS:
ORGANIZATIONAL AFFILIATION (mark with an asterisk * if for identification
purposes only):

Other options: We welcome individually drafted letters. You can adapt and
mail this letter to Donald Fisher, or you can fax a letter to The Gap from
Global Exchange's web site:
<http://www.globalexchange.org/economy/corporations/gap/>.

Donald Fisher, Chairman
The Gap, Inc.
One Harrison Street
San Francisco, CA 94105

Dear Mr. Fisher:

I am writing to ask you to intervene on behalf of 835 workers fired on
August 12 from the PT Aneka Garmentama factory in Jakarta, Indonesia. All of
the fired workers are members of the Indonesian Prosperity Trade Union
(SBSI). They were fired after a one-month strike in which they sought:

1. Pay increases, adjusted to the new legal minimum wage
2. Transportation and meal allowances, as mandated by Department of Manpower
standards
3. Freedom of association and collective bargaining (The company had refused
to meet with SBSI mediators.)

It hardly seems consistent with The Gap's code of conduct that workers in
Indonesia who produce clothing for your company are being cheated out of
legally mandated wages and benefits. Moreover, The Gap's code promises that
"Workers are free to choose whether or not to lawfully organize and join
associations. The factory does not threaten, penalize, restrict or interfere
with workers' lawful efforts to join associations of their choosing."

Your company is to be commended for committing itself to such principles. I
would like to see you make good on them. Management is trying to break the
union at PT Aneka Garmentama by firing every union member in the factory -
nearly the entire workforce! Do not cut and run from this situation.
Instead, use your company's considerable economic leverage with the
management of PT Aneka Garmentama. I hope to learn from human rights
advocates who are following the situation that The Gap's intervention has
resulted in the reinstatement of these workers and the implementation of
their just claims.

Sincerely,


cc:
Edy Sulaeman, Director, PT Aneka Garmentama; Jakarta, Indonesia
Fahmi Idris, Minister of Manpower; Jakarta, Indonesia

<><><><><>
CONTACT INFORMATION FORM

In order to provide better support for your work, Campaign for Labor Rights
will be making a systematic effort to contact local organizers when there is
a call for action in support of sweatshop worker struggles.

This contact information form is for U.S.-based local organizations involved
in sweatshop activism, not for individuals unconnected with organizations.

Please return this form by email: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, fax: (541) 431-0523 or
mail: Campaign for Labor Rights, 1247 "E" Street SE, Washington, DC 20003.

Name of organization:
Type of organization (mark one of the following with an X):
        Community-based
        Faith-based
        Union local or labor council
        Student (which school?)
        Other (please specify)
Street address, city, state, zip:
Email address:
Fax (with area code):

Our organization will mobilize around sweatshop worker struggles in (check
all regions which apply):
        Central America
        Mexico
        the Caribbean
        Asia
        the United States

Name of primary contact person:
Day telephone (with area code):
Evening telephone (with area code):

Name of back-up contact person:
Day telephone (with area code):
Evening telephone (with area code):

Check here [  ] if you have not yet ordered the Campaign for Labor Rights
1999 Sweatshop Activist Organizing Packet and would like to receive a copy.
(Price: $10.) Packet includes donation form and return envelope.
Your name and postal address if you are ordering a packet:



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