Bill Spornitz on 11 Jan 2001 17:18:23 -0000 |
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Re: <nettime> Beware of Mickey - Disney Sweatshops in South China |
Although I couldn't find an email address for Michael Eisner himself, there is an *investor relations* mail page at http://disney.go.com/mail/investorinfo/index.html Again, here's the text of the letter that the Chinese group suggests be sent to the esteemed Mr. Eisner: Mr. Michael Eisner, CEO Walt Disney Company 500 South Buena Vista St. Burbank, CA 91521 Fax: 818-846-7319 Dear Mr. Eisner: RE: Disney Sweatshops in South China I am/We are writing to express my/our very serious concerns about recent reports of sweatshop abuses in factories producing Disney products in China. According to a report by the Hong Kong Christian Industrial Committee, workers are being forced to work up to 18 hours a day, seven days a week, often under dangerous working conditions, for poverty wages. Workers interviewed complain of bad food and dangerous and overcrowded living conditions. Obviously, these working and living conditions are totally unacceptable, and are clearly in violation of both Chinese Labour Law and your company's code of conduct. As promised in your code of conduct, Disney should ensure that its contractors respect workers' rights. However, your company's current monitoring program appears to be inadequate and ineffective. Rather than cutting and running from contract factories in violation of the Disney code and Chinese law, which would only cause more suffering for the affected workers, Disney should act responsibly and work with your contractors to correct the problems immediately. I/We strongly urge Disney to do the following: 1. Promote workers' rights education at the workplace so that workers are aware of their rights and able to make complaints when those rights are violated. 2. Involve workers in the monitoring process. They should be empowered to act as on-going workplace monitors. 3. Provide accessible and trustworthy channels (e.g. letter box in the factory with prepaid postal envelopes) for workers to lodge complaints to the company and interested third parties. The company should guarantee that there will be no retaliation against workers who register complaints. 4. Strictly monitor and assist your suppliers to comply with the national labour laws and Disney's Code. Instead of simply cutting and running, Disney should work with the non-complying factories to improve the situation. 5. Disclose all information on your suppliers for public scrutiny. I/we look forward to receiving a prompt reply outlining the specific steps your company is taking to correct these problems and to make your monitoring program more transparent, credible and effective. Yours sincerely, Name/ Organization / Contact Information # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net