‘Press 1 for child labour’ – Garment workers use cellphones to report abuses

Two mobile services, both by U.S.-based companies, encourage workers to call toll-free numbers to anonymously log violations they see around them.The idea is to give big brands early warning of problems at the furthest ends of their supply chains as they seek to comply with tougher legislation against labour exploitation and modern slavery.

“One of the big challenges for companies in locations far from their suppliers is: How do you hear from workers directly?” said Sarah Labowitz, co-director of the Center for Business and Human Rights at the NYC Stern School of Business in New York.”When it comes to issues such as discrimination, harassment and abuse, workers have a role in flagging these problems. And as with a lot of social problems, we often look to technology for solutions,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.The two systems, Laborlink and LaborVoices, are similar. Workers call and answer simple questions, pressing 1 for “yes” and 2 for “no”.Questions are along the lines of: Are you being treated fairly? Are wages paid on time? Are fire exits locked? Have you seen a child worker?An analysis of calls to LaborVoices from more than 5,000 workers in Bangladesh in the first half of the year showed almost a fifth of factories had a “high risk” of child labour, Ayush Khanna, a LaborVoices director, said.”Mobile-phone penetration in developing countries is more than 90 percent today, so it’s an obvious technology to use to increase the transparency and accountability of the supply chain,” he said in a phone interview.”The system gets around many of the limitations of traditional audits, which are slow, occasional and may be inaccurate because workers are afraid.”Bangladesh, which ranks only behind China as a supplier of apparel to Western countries, relies on garments for more than 80 percent of its exports and about 4 million jobs. Workers earn a minimum monthly wage of $68 (£52.4), compared with $280 in China.Low wages and poor working conditions have plagued the country’s $26 billion garment export industry. Bangladesh had one of the worst industrial accidents in 2013, when more than 1,000 people were killed in the collapse of the Rana Plaza complex.In May this year, three workers were killed in a fire at a textile factory near Dhaka.Since the Rana Plaza disaster, legislation has been introduced for greater supply-chain transparency and improved rights and safety for workers. But progress has been slow.The 5,239 workers who called LaborVoices in the first half of the year worked in 85 factories in Dhaka and Chittagong, which supplied more than 30 global brands including Walmart, Target, Zara, Adidas, H&M and Levi’s, Khanna said.LaborVoices is also tracking abuse of Syrian migrant workers in Turkey’s garment industry, seeking evidence of forced labour and trafficking, Khanna said.Laborlink has reached more than 500,000 workers in 16 countries from China to Colombia, the company says.But while technology can help flag abuses in the supply chain, it cannot single-handedly solve them, Labowitz said.”Calls from workers is a good system to have, but it is not a substitute for audits and checks,” she said. “You need both to tackle the issues in the supply chain.”(Reporting by Rina Chandran @rinachandran, Editing by Timothy Large. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women’s rights, trafficking, corruption and climate change. Visit news.trust.org to see more stories.) 

Related Posts

Bangladesh seeks revival of silk industry

They specialise in high-quality mulberry silk — widely known as Bengal or Rajshahi silk — produced by the larvae of moths fed on fresh mulberry leaves and…

France, Germany, Italy, Spain seek tax on digital giants’ revenues

Currently such companies are often taxed on profits booked by subsidiaries in low-tax countries like Ireland even though the revenue originated from other EU countries.“We should no…

Henkel goes vegan to revive beauty business

Henkel will relaunch its European shampoo brand Schauma with a “vegan” formula, roll out to more markets its Nature Box line of hair and body care products…

HanesBrands launches face masks, completes production for U.S. government

The face masks launched under the company’s Hanes and Champion brands. Hanes introduced 3-ply all-cotton face masks for consumers and Hanes lightweight 2-ply seamless face masks, while…

Humans still cheaper than AI in vast majority of jobs, MIT finds

In one of the first in-depth probes of the viability of AI displacing labor, researchers modeled the cost attractiveness of automating various tasks in the US, concentrating…

Hanneli Rupert defends use of exotic skins in South Africa

The 34-year-old South African entrepreneur runs Merchants on Long, a fashion concept store she founded in Cape Town a decade ago that specializes in African designers’ clothes…