<pre>Background:Gustavo Vera and at least seven other activists from La Alameda in Buenos Aires, Argentina, were attacked and wounded on July 10 after they went with journalists to free workers and their families from a secret garment sweatshop they had earlier identified. The workers and family were able to leave with their belongings while the inspectors from the city’s labour department stayed inside. Within minutes arrived “Alfredo Ayala” who identified himself as “a representative of the Bolivian community”, who called by phone to “send me more people”, and then in less than ten minutes up to a hundred men had gathered, and when the TV cameras of the reporters who were accompanying Gustavo had left, those men began to attack Gustavo and his companions from La Alameda – while two policemen diverted traffic and the chief of the operation said that there were no more personnel to send.
<pre>
<pre>
While the attackers ran off, Gustavo Vera was brutally attacked and had
to be taken out from the crowd by the police. Five wounded were taken to
the hospital and various companions of La Alameda giving statements in
police station No. 40, two blocks from the sweatshop.
(<a href="http://laretaguardiaam770.blogspot.com/" class="moz-txt-link-freetext">http://laretaguardiaam770.blogspot.com/</a>)
Gustavo now has 7 stitches in the head, a swollen face, a bandaged arm.
He said he's glad they could bring the workers out and they are now
safely at La Alameda. But don't ask where the secretary for human rights
or for assistance to victims of trafficking are, he said, because he
hasn't seen them.
Many of us in AMRC, ATNC Network and other groups in Hong Kong and rest
of Asia met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March
2009, when Asian countries were already many months into worsening
financial and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared
with us the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in
2001 and their strategies for empowerment and survival. /He also shared
how his organization La Alameda grew from a popular assembly to include
a worker-run cooperative and now keeps defending workers' rights by
exposing and helping workers where mainstream unions often don't reach -
trafficked migrant workers in hidden sweatshops, trafficked sex workers,
plantations where even children are forced to work.
/
/Since then, much more news has been reported about the July 10 attack
situation. Some of that news says:
- there were 20 machines and at least 10 people living in the small
sweatshop
- the daughter of one, a girl of 15, was abused by the owner
- two of the workers had been trafficked in directly from Bolivia to
this sweatshop just two weeks ago
- the sweatshop made bags and clothes for a garment shop owned by
Koreans (but note, the Korean was the final purchaser and also the
retailer in Argentina)
- the sweatshop was closed last year after an exposure protest but for
some reason continued producing
- the workers and people were kept enclosed in horrible living
conditions, dirty, poor food, exposed cables, toilet in terrible state
- they had to work from 7 a.m. to 23 p.m.
- the workers were paid US$0.92 per bag produced
/
/- The guy Ayala (who is known by the garment sweatshop workers and
called for the attack) has previously stopped an inspection. It seems
someone is protecting him, and he is totally above the law. However now
they have both sound recording and also a video recording showing him
and the other attackers -including Ayala saying "get me more people" and
policemen nearby were redirecting traffic and did not get more help,
saying 'we are only transit police', while the thugs were beating the
men and women to their heart's content. 40 people from La Alameda were
there while the thugs were more than double the number.
/
/La Alameda wants the Subscretary of Labour of the city to make a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, close the sweatshop
immediately, sue the owner for violating the law on homebased work, the
law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and trafficking in
persons. Extensive charges brought against the owner of the brand
‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. So far the victims are being taken care of by La Alameda.
/
/_*What you can do:
*_1. Please read the below statement and give your organization/name if
you wish to support!
/
/2. La Alameda requests donation for a carriage or two for the baby and
a marriage bed. These materials are destined for the familes that were
freed from the sweatshop. They need it urgently until they receive help
from the city or national government.
3. Organize an action at the Argentine Consulate in your country. Inform
us if you will do so - may//be our groups can do on a single date!
/
Regards
Doris
{DRAFT LETTER TO ARGENTINA AUTHORITIES FROM ASIAN WORKER GROUPS]
Att: Argentina Consulate in HK
1210 Jardine House, 1 Connaught Road Central, Hong Kong Special
Administraive Region, People's Republic of China
Tel: (852) 2523 3208 Fax: (852) 2877 0906
Attn: Cancilleria Argentina
Ministro Jorge Taiana
Jefe de Gobierno de la Ciudad Mauricio Macri
Presidente Cristina Kirchner
**
Esmeralda 1212, C1007ABR, Buenos Aires, Argentina - Tel. +54 (11) 4819-7000
Dear ______________,
It was brought to our attention that Gustavo Vera and at least seven
other activists from La Alameda in Buenos Aires, Argentina, were
attacked and wounded last night (July 10) after they went with
journalists to free workers and their families from a secret garment
sweatshop they had earlier identified. Though police were not far away,
they did not do the job of protecting people who are working on behalf
of all Argentinians to expose gross exploitation and enslavement of
workers in hidden sweatshops, for the profits of heartless companies
that fail to bear full responsibility.
La Alameda and Gustavo Vera have been working tirelessly and
relentlessly for many years on behalf of workers and against slavery,
and in recent months have made great media exposures of networks of
prostitution, of places disguised as bars, where women were found to
have been victims of trafficking, including minors. They exposed these
with the help of the cartoneros, with hidden cameras. They exposed the
use of dangerous chemicals in drycleaner chains owned by the sister of
politician Michetti. They have continually been working with formerly
entrapped migrant Bolivian workers rescuing other workers from hidden
sweatshops where they often have been trafficked in and kept to work for
long hours, low pay, and atrocious living conditions.
In Asia as well workers are forced to work long hours, with exposure to
health problems and often sexual harassment, and with no protection from
their national police, but rather often the terrorism and harassment of
their own police and of hired thugs, for their attempts to assert their
rights as workers.
We met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March 2009,
when Asian countries were already many months into worsening financial
and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared with us
the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in 2001 and
their strategies for empowerment and survival.
We applaud and appreciate his strong sense of solidarity with workers
and constant struggle to raise the rights and living standards of all
workers regardless of origin. This is true international solidarity.
We were horrified and outraged to hear of the attack that happened on
July 10 to Gustavo Vera and La Alameda members. We strongly condemn the
thugs who attacked Gustavo and his companions of La Alameda in such a
cowardly way immediately after they carried out the necessary and
important work of rescuing workers from slave labour and exposing this
scourge of the country which ends up profiting large companies. We also
strongly question the role of the police, and urge that the police of
the city and of the country make a full investigation. We urge the
police and the government to ensure that the criminals who carried out
the attacks are found and punished, and that Gustavo Vera and the other
members of La Alameda are given medical care and protection from further
attacks.
/We also support the demands of La Alameda for the victims of
trafficking whom they rescued. We strongly urge that the city and
national government take responsibility by immediately making a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, closing the sweatshop
immediately, and suing the owner for violating the law on homebased
work, the law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and
trafficking in persons. Charges should brought against the owner of the
brand ‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. /
With all solidarity from Asia
While the attackers ran off, Gustavo Vera was brutally attacked and had
to be taken out from the crowd by the police. Five wounded were taken to
the hospital and various companions of La Alameda giving statements in
police station No. 40, two blocks from the sweatshop.
(<a href="http://laretaguardiaam770.blogspot.com/" class="moz-txt-link-freetext">http://laretaguardiaam770.blogspot.com/</a>)
Gustavo now has 7 stitches in the head, a swollen face, a bandaged arm.
He said he's glad they could bring the workers out and they are now
safely at La Alameda. But don't ask where the secretary for human rights
or for assistance to victims of trafficking are, he said, because he
hasn't seen them.
Many of us in AMRC, ATNC Network and other groups in Hong Kong and rest
of Asia met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March
2009, when Asian countries were already many months into worsening
financial and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared
with us the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in
2001 and their strategies for empowerment and survival. /He also shared
how his organization La Alameda grew from a popular assembly to include
a worker-run cooperative and now keeps defending workers' rights by
exposing and helping workers where mainstream unions often don't reach -
trafficked migrant workers in hidden sweatshops, trafficked sex workers,
plantations where even children are forced to work.
/
/Since then, much more news has been reported about the July 10 attack
situation. Some of that news says:
- there were 20 machines and at least 10 people living in the small
sweatshop
- the daughter of one, a girl of 15, was abused by the owner
- two of the workers had been trafficked in directly from Bolivia to
this sweatshop just two weeks ago
- the sweatshop made bags and clothes for a garment shop owned by
Koreans (but note, the Korean was the final purchaser and also the
retailer in Argentina)
- the sweatshop was closed last year after an exposure protest but for
some reason continued producing
- the workers and people were kept enclosed in horrible living
conditions, dirty, poor food, exposed cables, toilet in terrible state
- they had to work from 7 a.m. to 23 p.m.
- the workers were paid US$0.92 per bag produced
/
/- The guy Ayala (who is known by the garment sweatshop workers and
called for the attack) has previously stopped an inspection. It seems
someone is protecting him, and he is totally above the law. However now
they have both sound recording and also a video recording showing him
and the other attackers -including Ayala saying "get me more people" and
policemen nearby were redirecting traffic and did not get more help,
saying 'we are only transit police', while the thugs were beating the
men and women to their heart's content. 40 people from La Alameda were
there while the thugs were more than double the number.
/
/La Alameda wants the Subscretary of Labour of the city to make a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, close the sweatshop
immediately, sue the owner for violating the law on homebased work, the
law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and trafficking in
persons. Extensive charges brought against the owner of the brand
‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. So far the victims are being taken care of by La Alameda.
/
/_*What you can do:
*_1. Please read the below statement and give your organization/name if
you wish to support!
/
/2. La Alameda requests donation for a carriage or two for the baby and
a marriage bed. These materials are destined for the familes that were
freed from the sweatshop. They need it urgently until they receive help
from the city or national government.
3. Organize an action at the Argentine Consulate in your country. Inform
us if you will do so - may//be our groups can do on a single date!
/
Regards
Doris
{DRAFT LETTER TO ARGENTINA AUTHORITIES FROM ASIAN WORKER GROUPS]
Att: Argentina Consulate in HK
1210 Jardine House, 1 Connaught Road Central, Hong Kong Special
Administraive Region, People's Republic of China
Tel: (852) 2523 3208 Fax: (852) 2877 0906
Attn: Cancilleria Argentina
Ministro Jorge Taiana
Jefe de Gobierno de la Ciudad Mauricio Macri
Presidente Cristina Kirchner
**
Esmeralda 1212, C1007ABR, Buenos Aires, Argentina - Tel. +54 (11) 4819-7000
Dear ______________,
It was brought to our attention that Gustavo Vera and at least seven
other activists from La Alameda in Buenos Aires, Argentina, were
attacked and wounded last night (July 10) after they went with
journalists to free workers and their families from a secret garment
sweatshop they had earlier identified. Though police were not far away,
they did not do the job of protecting people who are working on behalf
of all Argentinians to expose gross exploitation and enslavement of
workers in hidden sweatshops, for the profits of heartless companies
that fail to bear full responsibility.
La Alameda and Gustavo Vera have been working tirelessly and
relentlessly for many years on behalf of workers and against slavery,
and in recent months have made great media exposures of networks of
prostitution, of places disguised as bars, where women were found to
have been victims of trafficking, including minors. They exposed these
with the help of the cartoneros, with hidden cameras. They exposed the
use of dangerous chemicals in drycleaner chains owned by the sister of
politician Michetti. They have continually been working with formerly
entrapped migrant Bolivian workers rescuing other workers from hidden
sweatshops where they often have been trafficked in and kept to work for
long hours, low pay, and atrocious living conditions.
In Asia as well workers are forced to work long hours, with exposure to
health problems and often sexual harassment, and with no protection from
their national police, but rather often the terrorism and harassment of
their own police and of hired thugs, for their attempts to assert their
rights as workers.
We met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March 2009,
when Asian countries were already many months into worsening financial
and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared with us
the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in 2001 and
their strategies for empowerment and survival.
We applaud and appreciate his strong sense of solidarity with workers
and constant struggle to raise the rights and living standards of all
workers regardless of origin. This is true international solidarity.
We were horrified and outraged to hear of the attack that happened on
July 10 to Gustavo Vera and La Alameda members. We strongly condemn the
thugs who attacked Gustavo and his companions of La Alameda in such a
cowardly way immediately after they carried out the necessary and
important work of rescuing workers from slave labour and exposing this
scourge of the country which ends up profiting large companies. We also
strongly question the role of the police, and urge that the police of
the city and of the country make a full investigation. We urge the
police and the government to ensure that the criminals who carried out
the attacks are found and punished, and that Gustavo Vera and the other
members of La Alameda are given medical care and protection from further
attacks.
/We also support the demands of La Alameda for the victims of
trafficking whom they rescued. We strongly urge that the city and
national government take responsibility by immediately making a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, closing the sweatshop
immediately, and suing the owner for violating the law on homebased
work, the law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and
trafficking in persons. Charges should brought against the owner of the
brand ‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. /
With all solidarity from Asia
While the attackers ran off, Gustavo Vera was brutally attacked and had
to be taken out from the crowd by the police. Five wounded were taken to
the hospital and various companions of La Alameda giving statements in
police station No. 40, two blocks from the sweatshop.
(<a href="http://laretaguardiaam770.blogspot.com/" class="moz-txt-link-freetext">http://laretaguardiaam770.blogspot.com/</a>)
Gustavo now has 7 stitches in the head, a swollen face, a bandaged arm.
He said he's glad they could bring the workers out and they are now
safely at La Alameda. But don't ask where the secretary for human rights
or for assistance to victims of trafficking are, he said, because he
hasn't seen them.
Many of us in AMRC, ATNC Network and other groups in Hong Kong and rest
of Asia met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March
2009, when Asian countries were already many months into worsening
financial and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared
with us the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in
2001 and their strategies for empowerment and survival. /He also shared
how his organization La Alameda grew from a popular assembly to include
a worker-run cooperative and now keeps defending workers' rights by
exposing and helping workers where mainstream unions often don't reach -
trafficked migrant workers in hidden sweatshops, trafficked sex workers,
plantations where even children are forced to work.
/
/Since then, much more news has been reported about the July 10 attack
situation. Some of that news says:
- there were 20 machines and at least 10 people living in the small
sweatshop
- the daughter of one, a girl of 15, was abused by the owner
- two of the workers had been trafficked in directly from Bolivia to
this sweatshop just two weeks ago
- the sweatshop made bags and clothes for a garment shop owned by
Koreans (but note, the Korean was the final purchaser and also the
retailer in Argentina)
- the sweatshop was closed last year after an exposure protest but for
some reason continued producing
- the workers and people were kept enclosed in horrible living
conditions, dirty, poor food, exposed cables, toilet in terrible state
- they had to work from 7 a.m. to 23 p.m.
- the workers were paid US$0.92 per bag produced
/
/- The guy Ayala (who is known by the garment sweatshop workers and
called for the attack) has previously stopped an inspection. It seems
someone is protecting him, and he is totally above the law. However now
they have both sound recording and also a video recording showing him
and the other attackers -including Ayala saying "get me more people" and
policemen nearby were redirecting traffic and did not get more help,
saying 'we are only transit police', while the thugs were beating the
men and women to their heart's content. 40 people from La Alameda were
there while the thugs were more than double the number.
/
/La Alameda wants the Subscretary of Labour of the city to make a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, close the sweatshop
immediately, sue the owner for violating the law on homebased work, the
law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and trafficking in
persons. Extensive charges brought against the owner of the brand
‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. So far the victims are being taken care of by La Alameda.
/
/_*What you can do:
*_1. Please read the below statement and give your organization/name if
you wish to support!
/
/2. La Alameda requests donation for a carriage or two for the baby and
a marriage bed. These materials are destined for the familes that were
freed from the sweatshop. They need it urgently until they receive help
from the city or national government.
3. Organize an action at the Argentine Consulate in your country. Inform
us if you will do so - may//be our groups can do on a single date!
/
Regards
Doris
{DRAFT LETTER TO ARGENTINA AUTHORITIES FROM ASIAN WORKER GROUPS]
Att: Argentina Consulate in HK
1210 Jardine House, 1 Connaught Road Central, Hong Kong Special
Administraive Region, People's Republic of China
Tel: (852) 2523 3208 Fax: (852) 2877 0906
Attn: Cancilleria Argentina
Ministro Jorge Taiana
Jefe de Gobierno de la Ciudad Mauricio Macri
Presidente Cristina Kirchner
**
Esmeralda 1212, C1007ABR, Buenos Aires, Argentina - Tel. +54 (11) 4819-7000
Dear ______________,
It was brought to our attention that Gustavo Vera and at least seven
other activists from La Alameda in Buenos Aires, Argentina, were
attacked and wounded last night (July 10) after they went with
journalists to free workers and their families from a secret garment
sweatshop they had earlier identified. Though police were not far away,
they did not do the job of protecting people who are working on behalf
of all Argentinians to expose gross exploitation and enslavement of
workers in hidden sweatshops, for the profits of heartless companies
that fail to bear full responsibility.
La Alameda and Gustavo Vera have been working tirelessly and
relentlessly for many years on behalf of workers and against slavery,
and in recent months have made great media exposures of networks of
prostitution, of places disguised as bars, where women were found to
have been victims of trafficking, including minors. They exposed these
with the help of the cartoneros, with hidden cameras. They exposed the
use of dangerous chemicals in drycleaner chains owned by the sister of
politician Michetti. They have continually been working with formerly
entrapped migrant Bolivian workers rescuing other workers from hidden
sweatshops where they often have been trafficked in and kept to work for
long hours, low pay, and atrocious living conditions.
In Asia as well workers are forced to work long hours, with exposure to
health problems and often sexual harassment, and with no protection from
their national police, but rather often the terrorism and harassment of
their own police and of hired thugs, for their attempts to assert their
rights as workers.
We met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March 2009,
when Asian countries were already many months into worsening financial
and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared with us
the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in 2001 and
their strategies for empowerment and survival.
We applaud and appreciate his strong sense of solidarity with workers
and constant struggle to raise the rights and living standards of all
workers regardless of origin. This is true international solidarity.
We were horrified and outraged to hear of the attack that happened on
July 10 to Gustavo Vera and La Alameda members. We strongly condemn the
thugs who attacked Gustavo and his companions of La Alameda in such a
cowardly way immediately after they carried out the necessary and
important work of rescuing workers from slave labour and exposing this
scourge of the country which ends up profiting large companies. We also
strongly question the role of the police, and urge that the police of
the city and of the country make a full investigation. We urge the
police and the government to ensure that the criminals who carried out
the attacks are found and punished, and that Gustavo Vera and the other
members of La Alameda are given medical care and protection from further
attacks.
/We also support the demands of La Alameda for the victims of
trafficking whom they rescued. We strongly urge that the city and
national government take responsibility by immediately making a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, closing the sweatshop
immediately, and suing the owner for violating the law on homebased
work, the law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and
trafficking in persons. Charges should brought against the owner of the
brand ‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. /
With all solidarity from Asia
While the attackers ran off, Gustavo Vera was brutally attacked and had
to be taken out from the crowd by the police. Five wounded were taken to
the hospital and various companions of La Alameda giving statements in
police station No. 40, two blocks from the sweatshop.
(http://laretaguardiaam770.blogspot.com/)
Gustavo now has 7 stitches in the head, a swollen face, a bandaged arm.
He said he's glad they could bring the workers out and they are now
safely at La Alameda. But don't ask where the secretary for human rights
or for assistance to victims of trafficking are, he said, because he
hasn't seen them.
Many of us in AMRC, ATNC Network and other groups in Hong Kong and rest
of Asia met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March
2009, when Asian countries were already many months into worsening
financial and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared
with us the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in
2001 and their strategies for empowerment and survival. /He also shared
how his organization La Alameda grew from a popular assembly to include
a worker-run cooperative and now keeps defending workers' rights by
exposing and helping workers where mainstream unions often don't reach -
trafficked migrant workers in hidden sweatshops, trafficked sex workers,
plantations where even children are forced to work.
/
/Since then, much more news has been reported about the July 10 attack
situation. Some of that news says:
- there were 20 machines and at least 10 people living in the small
sweatshop
- the daughter of one, a girl of 15, was abused by the owner
- two of the workers had been trafficked in directly from Bolivia to
this sweatshop just two weeks ago
- the sweatshop made bags and clothes for a garment shop owned by
Koreans (but note, the Korean was the final purchaser and also the
retailer in Argentina)
- the sweatshop was closed last year after an exposure protest but for
some reason continued producing
- the workers and people were kept enclosed in horrible living
conditions, dirty, poor food, exposed cables, toilet in terrible state
- they had to work from 7 a.m. to 23 p.m.
- the workers were paid US$0.92 per bag produced
/
/- The guy Ayala (who is known by the garment sweatshop workers and
called for the attack) has previously stopped an inspection. It seems
someone is protecting him, and he is totally above the law. However now
they have both sound recording and also a video recording showing him
and the other attackers -including Ayala saying "get me more people" and
policemen nearby were redirecting traffic and did not get more help,
saying 'we are only transit police', while the thugs were beating the
men and women to their heart's content. 40 people from La Alameda were
there while the thugs were more than double the number.
/
/La Alameda wants the Subscretary of Labour of the city to make a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, close the sweatshop
immediately, sue the owner for violating the law on homebased work, the
law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and trafficking in
persons. Extensive charges brought against the owner of the brand
‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. So far the victims are being taken care of by La Alameda.
/
/_*What you can do:
*_1. Please read the below statement and give your organization/name if
you wish to support!
/
/2. La Alameda requests donation for a carriage or two for the baby and
a marriage bed. These materials are destined for the familes that were
freed from the sweatshop. They need it urgently until they receive help
from the city or national government.
3. Organize an action at the Argentine Consulate in your country. Inform
us if you will do so - may//be our groups can do on a single date!
/
Regards
Doris
{DRAFT LETTER TO ARGENTINA AUTHORITIES FROM ASIAN WORKER GROUPS]
Att: Argentina Consulate in HK
1210 Jardine House, 1 Connaught Road Central, Hong Kong Special
Administraive Region, People's Republic of China
Tel: (852) 2523 3208 Fax: (852) 2877 0906
Attn: Cancilleria Argentina
Ministro Jorge Taiana
Jefe de Gobierno de la Ciudad Mauricio Macri
Presidente Cristina Kirchner
**
Esmeralda 1212, C1007ABR, Buenos Aires, Argentina - Tel. +54 (11) 4819-7000
Dear ______________,
It was brought to our attention that Gustavo Vera and at least seven
other activists from La Alameda in Buenos Aires, Argentina, were
attacked and wounded last night (July 10) after they went with
journalists to free workers and their families from a secret garment
sweatshop they had earlier identified. Though police were not far away,
they did not do the job of protecting people who are working on behalf
of all Argentinians to expose gross exploitation and enslavement of
workers in hidden sweatshops, for the profits of heartless companies
that fail to bear full responsibility.
La Alameda and Gustavo Vera have been working tirelessly and
relentlessly for many years on behalf of workers and against slavery,
and in recent months have made great media exposures of networks of
prostitution, of places disguised as bars, where women were found to
have been victims of trafficking, including minors. They exposed these
with the help of the cartoneros, with hidden cameras. They exposed the
use of dangerous chemicals in drycleaner chains owned by the sister of
politician Michetti. They have continually been working with formerly
entrapped migrant Bolivian workers rescuing other workers from hidden
sweatshops where they often have been trafficked in and kept to work for
long hours, low pay, and atrocious living conditions.
In Asia as well workers are forced to work long hours, with exposure to
health problems and often sexual harassment, and with no protection from
their national police, but rather often the terrorism and harassment of
their own police and of hired thugs, for their attempts to assert their
rights as workers.
We met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March 2009,
when Asian countries were already many months into worsening financial
and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared with us
the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in 2001 and
their strategies for empowerment and survival.
We applaud and appreciate his strong sense of solidarity with workers
and constant struggle to raise the rights and living standards of all
workers regardless of origin. This is true international solidarity.
We were horrified and outraged to hear of the attack that happened on
July 10 to Gustavo Vera and La Alameda members. We strongly condemn the
thugs who attacked Gustavo and his companions of La Alameda in such a
cowardly way immediately after they carried out the necessary and
important work of rescuing workers from slave labour and exposing this
scourge of the country which ends up profiting large companies. We also
strongly question the role of the police, and urge that the police of
the city and of the country make a full investigation. We urge the
police and the government to ensure that the criminals who carried out
the attacks are found and punished, and that Gustavo Vera and the other
members of La Alameda are given medical care and protection from further
attacks.
/We also support the demands of La Alameda for the victims of
trafficking whom they rescued. We strongly urge that the city and
national government take responsibility by immediately making a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, closing the sweatshop
immediately, and suing the owner for violating the law on homebased
work, the law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and
trafficking in persons. Charges should brought against the owner of the
brand ‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. /
With all solidarity from Asia
While the attackers ran off, Gustavo Vera was brutally attacked and had
to be taken out from the crowd by the police. Five wounded were taken to
the hospital and various companions of La Alameda giving statements in
police station No. 40, two blocks from the sweatshop.
(http://laretaguardiaam770.blogspot.com/)
Gustavo now has 7 stitches in the head, a swollen face, a bandaged arm.
He said he's glad they could bring the workers out and they are now
safely at La Alameda. But don't ask where the secretary for human rights
or for assistance to victims of trafficking are, he said, because he
hasn't seen them.
Many of us in AMRC, ATNC Network and other groups in Hong Kong and rest
of Asia met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March
2009, when Asian countries were already many months into worsening
financial and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared
with us the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in
2001 and their strategies for empowerment and survival. /He also shared
how his organization La Alameda grew from a popular assembly to include
a worker-run cooperative and now keeps defending workers' rights by
exposing and helping workers where mainstream unions often don't reach -
trafficked migrant workers in hidden sweatshops, trafficked sex workers,
plantations where even children are forced to work.
/
/Since then, much more news has been reported about the July 10 attack
situation. Some of that news says:
- there were 20 machines and at least 10 people living in the small
sweatshop
- the daughter of one, a girl of 15, was abused by the owner
- two of the workers had been trafficked in directly from Bolivia to
this sweatshop just two weeks ago
- the sweatshop made bags and clothes for a garment shop owned by
Koreans (but note, the Korean was the final purchaser and also the
retailer in Argentina)
- the sweatshop was closed last year after an exposure protest but for
some reason continued producing
- the workers and people were kept enclosed in horrible living
conditions, dirty, poor food, exposed cables, toilet in terrible state
- they had to work from 7 a.m. to 23 p.m.
- the workers were paid US$0.92 per bag produced
/
/- The guy Ayala (who is known by the garment sweatshop workers and
called for the attack) has previously stopped an inspection. It seems
someone is protecting him, and he is totally above the law. However now
they have both sound recording and also a video recording showing him
and the other attackers -including Ayala saying "get me more people" and
policemen nearby were redirecting traffic and did not get more help,
saying 'we are only transit police', while the thugs were beating the
men and women to their heart's content. 40 people from La Alameda were
there while the thugs were more than double the number.
/
/La Alameda wants the Subscretary of Labour of the city to make a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, close the sweatshop
immediately, sue the owner for violating the law on homebased work, the
law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and trafficking in
persons. Extensive charges brought against the owner of the brand
‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. So far the victims are being taken care of by La Alameda.
/
/_*What you can do:
*_1. Please read the below statement and give your organization/name if
you wish to support!
/
/2. La Alameda requests donation for a carriage or two for the baby and
a marriage bed. These materials are destined for the familes that were
freed from the sweatshop. They need it urgently until they receive help
from the city or national government.
3. Organize an action at the Argentine Consulate in your country. Inform
us if you will do so - may//be our groups can do on a single date!
/
Regards
Doris
{DRAFT LETTER TO ARGENTINA AUTHORITIES FROM ASIAN WORKER GROUPS]
Att: Argentina Consulate in HK
1210 Jardine House, 1 Connaught Road Central, Hong Kong Special
Administraive Region, People's Republic of China
Tel: (852) 2523 3208 Fax: (852) 2877 0906
Attn: Cancilleria Argentina
Ministro Jorge Taiana
Jefe de Gobierno de la Ciudad Mauricio Macri
Presidente Cristina Kirchner
**
Esmeralda 1212, C1007ABR, Buenos Aires, Argentina - Tel. +54 (11) 4819-7000
Dear ______________,
It was brought to our attention that Gustavo Vera and at least seven
other activists from La Alameda in Buenos Aires, Argentina, were
attacked and wounded last night (July 10) after they went with
journalists to free workers and their families from a secret garment
sweatshop they had earlier identified. Though police were not far away,
they did not do the job of protecting people who are working on behalf
of all Argentinians to expose gross exploitation and enslavement of
workers in hidden sweatshops, for the profits of heartless companies
that fail to bear full responsibility.
La Alameda and Gustavo Vera have been working tirelessly and
relentlessly for many years on behalf of workers and against slavery,
and in recent months have made great media exposures of networks of
prostitution, of places disguised as bars, where women were found to
have been victims of trafficking, including minors. They exposed these
with the help of the cartoneros, with hidden cameras. They exposed the
use of dangerous chemicals in drycleaner chains owned by the sister of
politician Michetti. They have continually been working with formerly
entrapped migrant Bolivian workers rescuing other workers from hidden
sweatshops where they often have been trafficked in and kept to work for
long hours, low pay, and atrocious living conditions.
In Asia as well workers are forced to work long hours, with exposure to
health problems and often sexual harassment, and with no protection from
their national police, but rather often the terrorism and harassment of
their own police and of hired thugs, for their attempts to assert their
rights as workers.
We met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March 2009,
when Asian countries were already many months into worsening financial
and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared with us
the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in 2001 and
their strategies for empowerment and survival.
We applaud and appreciate his strong sense of solidarity with workers
and constant struggle to raise the rights and living standards of all
workers regardless of origin. This is true international solidarity.
We were horrified and outraged to hear of the attack that happened on
July 10 to Gustavo Vera and La Alameda members. We strongly condemn the
thugs who attacked Gustavo and his companions of La Alameda in such a
cowardly way immediately after they carried out the necessary and
important work of rescuing workers from slave labour and exposing this
scourge of the country which ends up profiting large companies. We also
strongly question the role of the police, and urge that the police of
the city and of the country make a full investigation. We urge the
police and the government to ensure that the criminals who carried out
the attacks are found and punished, and that Gustavo Vera and the other
members of La Alameda are given medical care and protection from further
attacks.
/We also support the demands of La Alameda for the victims of
trafficking whom they rescued. We strongly urge that the city and
national government take responsibility by immediately making a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, closing the sweatshop
immediately, and suing the owner for violating the law on homebased
work, the law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and
trafficking in persons. Charges should brought against the owner of the
brand ‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. /
With all solidarity from AsiaWhile the attackers ran off, Gustavo Vera was brutally attacked and had
to be taken out from the crowd by the police. Five wounded were taken to
the hospital and various companions of La Alameda giving statements in
police station No. 40, two blocks from the sweatshop.
(http://laretaguardiaam770.blogspot.com/)
Gustavo now has 7 stitches in the head, a swollen face, a bandaged arm.
He said he's glad they could bring the workers out and they are now
safely at La Alameda. But don't ask where the secretary for human rights
or for assistance to victims of trafficking are, he said, because he
hasn't seen them.
Many of us in AMRC, ATNC Network and other groups in Hong Kong and rest
of Asia met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March
2009, when Asian countries were already many months into worsening
financial and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared
with us the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in
2001 and their strategies for empowerment and survival. /He also shared
how his organization La Alameda grew from a popular assembly to include
a worker-run cooperative and now keeps defending workers' rights by
exposing and helping workers where mainstream unions often don't reach -
trafficked migrant workers in hidden sweatshops, trafficked sex workers,
plantations where even children are forced to work.
/
/Since then, much more news has been reported about the July 10 attack
situation. Some of that news says:
- there were 20 machines and at least 10 people living in the small
sweatshop
- the daughter of one, a girl of 15, was abused by the owner
- two of the workers had been trafficked in directly from Bolivia to
this sweatshop just two weeks ago
- the sweatshop made bags and clothes for a garment shop owned by
Koreans (but note, the Korean was the final purchaser and also the
retailer in Argentina)
- the sweatshop was closed last year after an exposure protest but for
some reason continued producing
- the workers and people were kept enclosed in horrible living
conditions, dirty, poor food, exposed cables, toilet in terrible state
- they had to work from 7 a.m. to 23 p.m.
- the workers were paid US$0.92 per bag produced
/
/- The guy Ayala (who is known by the garment sweatshop workers and
called for the attack) has previously stopped an inspection. It seems
someone is protecting him, and he is totally above the law. However now
they have both sound recording and also a video recording showing him
and the other attackers -including Ayala saying "get me more people" and
policemen nearby were redirecting traffic and did not get more help,
saying 'we are only transit police', while the thugs were beating the
men and women to their heart's content. 40 people from La Alameda were
there while the thugs were more than double the number.
/
/La Alameda wants the Subscretary of Labour of the city to make a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, close the sweatshop
immediately, sue the owner for violating the law on homebased work, the
law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and trafficking in
persons. Extensive charges brought against the owner of the brand
‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. So far the victims are being taken care of by La Alameda.
/
/_*What you can do:
*_1. Please read the below statement and give your organization/name if
you wish to support!
/
/2. La Alameda requests donation for a carriage or two for the baby and
a marriage bed. These materials are destined for the familes that were
freed from the sweatshop. They need it urgently until they receive help
from the city or national government.
3. Organize an action at the Argentine Consulate in your country. Inform
us if you will do so - may//be our groups can do on a single date!
/
Regards
Doris
{DRAFT LETTER TO ARGENTINA AUTHORITIES FROM ASIAN WORKER GROUPS]
Att: Argentina Consulate in HK
1210 Jardine House, 1 Connaught Road Central, Hong Kong Special
Administraive Region, People's Republic of China
Tel: (852) 2523 3208 Fax: (852) 2877 0906
Attn: Cancilleria Argentina
Ministro Jorge Taiana
Jefe de Gobierno de la Ciudad Mauricio Macri
Presidente Cristina Kirchner
**
Esmeralda 1212, C1007ABR, Buenos Aires, Argentina - Tel. +54 (11) 4819-7000
Dear ______________,
It was brought to our attention that Gustavo Vera and at least seven
other activists from La Alameda in Buenos Aires, Argentina, were
attacked and wounded last night (July 10) after they went with
journalists to free workers and their families from a secret garment
sweatshop they had earlier identified. Though police were not far away,
they did not do the job of protecting people who are working on behalf
of all Argentinians to expose gross exploitation and enslavement of
workers in hidden sweatshops, for the profits of heartless companies
that fail to bear full responsibility.
La Alameda and Gustavo Vera have been working tirelessly and
relentlessly for many years on behalf of workers and against slavery,
and in recent months have made great media exposures of networks of
prostitution, of places disguised as bars, where women were found to
have been victims of trafficking, including minors. They exposed these
with the help of the cartoneros, with hidden cameras. They exposed the
use of dangerous chemicals in drycleaner chains owned by the sister of
politician Michetti. They have continually been working with formerly
entrapped migrant Bolivian workers rescuing other workers from hidden
sweatshops where they often have been trafficked in and kept to work for
long hours, low pay, and atrocious living conditions.
In Asia as well workers are forced to work long hours, with exposure to
health problems and often sexual harassment, and with no protection from
their national police, but rather often the terrorism and harassment of
their own police and of hired thugs, for their attempts to assert their
rights as workers.
We met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March 2009,
when Asian countries were already many months into worsening financial
and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared with us
the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in 2001 and
their strategies for empowerment and survival.
We applaud and appreciate his strong sense of solidarity with workers
and constant struggle to raise the rights and living standards of all
workers regardless of origin. This is true international solidarity.
We were horrified and outraged to hear of the attack that happened on
July 10 to Gustavo Vera and La Alameda members. We strongly condemn the
thugs who attacked Gustavo and his companions of La Alameda in such a
cowardly way immediately after they carried out the necessary and
important work of rescuing workers from slave labour and exposing this
scourge of the country which ends up profiting large companies. We also
strongly question the role of the police, and urge that the police of
the city and of the country make a full investigation. We urge the
police and the government to ensure that the criminals who carried out
the attacks are found and punished, and that Gustavo Vera and the other
members of La Alameda are given medical care and protection from further
attacks.
/We also support the demands of La Alameda for the victims of
trafficking whom they rescued. We strongly urge that the city and
national government take responsibility by immediately making a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, closing the sweatshop
immediately, and suing the owner for violating the law on homebased
work, the law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and
trafficking in persons. Charges should brought against the owner of the
brand ‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. /
With all solidarity from AsiaWhile the attackers ran off, Gustavo Vera was brutally attacked and had
to be taken out from the crowd by the police. Five wounded were taken to
the hospital and various companions of La Alameda giving statements in
police station No. 40, two blocks from the sweatshop.
(http://laretaguardiaam770.blogspot.com/)
Gustavo now has 7 stitches in the head, a swollen face, a bandaged arm.
He said he's glad they could bring the workers out and they are now
safely at La Alameda. But don't ask where the secretary for human rights
or for assistance to victims of trafficking are, he said, because he
hasn't seen them.
Many of us in AMRC, ATNC Network and other groups in Hong Kong and rest
of Asia met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March
2009, when Asian countries were already many months into worsening
financial and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared
with us the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in
2001 and their strategies for empowerment and survival. /He also shared
how his organization La Alameda grew from a popular assembly to include
a worker-run cooperative and now keeps defending workers' rights by
exposing and helping workers where mainstream unions often don't reach -
trafficked migrant workers in hidden sweatshops, trafficked sex workers,
plantations where even children are forced to work.
/
/Since then, much more news has been reported about the July 10 attack
situation. Some of that news says:
- there were 20 machines and at least 10 people living in the small
sweatshop
- the daughter of one, a girl of 15, was abused by the owner
- two of the workers had been trafficked in directly from Bolivia to
this sweatshop just two weeks ago
- the sweatshop made bags and clothes for a garment shop owned by
Koreans (but note, the Korean was the final purchaser and also the
retailer in Argentina)
- the sweatshop was closed last year after an exposure protest but for
some reason continued producing
- the workers and people were kept enclosed in horrible living
conditions, dirty, poor food, exposed cables, toilet in terrible state
- they had to work from 7 a.m. to 23 p.m.
- the workers were paid US$0.92 per bag produced
/
/- The guy Ayala (who is known by the garment sweatshop workers and
called for the attack) has previously stopped an inspection. It seems
someone is protecting him, and he is totally above the law. However now
they have both sound recording and also a video recording showing him
and the other attackers -including Ayala saying "get me more people" and
policemen nearby were redirecting traffic and did not get more help,
saying 'we are only transit police', while the thugs were beating the
men and women to their heart's content. 40 people from La Alameda were
there while the thugs were more than double the number.
/
/La Alameda wants the Subscretary of Labour of the city to make a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, close the sweatshop
immediately, sue the owner for violating the law on homebased work, the
law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and trafficking in
persons. Extensive charges brought against the owner of the brand
‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. So far the victims are being taken care of by La Alameda.
/
/_*What you can do:
*_1. Please read the below statement and give your organization/name if
you wish to support!
/
/2. La Alameda requests donation for a carriage or two for the baby and
a marriage bed. These materials are destined for the familes that were
freed from the sweatshop. They need it urgently until they receive help
from the city or national government.
3. Organize an action at the Argentine Consulate in your country. Inform
us if you will do so - may//be our groups can do on a single date!
/
Regards
Doris
{DRAFT LETTER TO ARGENTINA AUTHORITIES FROM ASIAN WORKER GROUPS]
Att: Argentina Consulate in HK
1210 Jardine House, 1 Connaught Road Central, Hong Kong Special
Administraive Region, People's Republic of China
Tel: (852) 2523 3208 Fax: (852) 2877 0906
Attn: Cancilleria Argentina
Ministro Jorge Taiana
Jefe de Gobierno de la Ciudad Mauricio Macri
Presidente Cristina Kirchner
**
Esmeralda 1212, C1007ABR, Buenos Aires, Argentina - Tel. +54 (11) 4819-7000
Dear ______________,
It was brought to our attention that Gustavo Vera and at least seven
other activists from La Alameda in Buenos Aires, Argentina, were
attacked and wounded last night (July 10) after they went with
journalists to free workers and their families from a secret garment
sweatshop they had earlier identified. Though police were not far away,
they did not do the job of protecting people who are working on behalf
of all Argentinians to expose gross exploitation and enslavement of
workers in hidden sweatshops, for the profits of heartless companies
that fail to bear full responsibility.
La Alameda and Gustavo Vera have been working tirelessly and
relentlessly for many years on behalf of workers and against slavery,
and in recent months have made great media exposures of networks of
prostitution, of places disguised as bars, where women were found to
have been victims of trafficking, including minors. They exposed these
with the help of the cartoneros, with hidden cameras. They exposed the
use of dangerous chemicals in drycleaner chains owned by the sister of
politician Michetti. They have continually been working with formerly
entrapped migrant Bolivian workers rescuing other workers from hidden
sweatshops where they often have been trafficked in and kept to work for
long hours, low pay, and atrocious living conditions.
In Asia as well workers are forced to work long hours, with exposure to
health problems and often sexual harassment, and with no protection from
their national police, but rather often the terrorism and harassment of
their own police and of hired thugs, for their attempts to assert their
rights as workers.
We met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March 2009,
when Asian countries were already many months into worsening financial
and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared with us
the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in 2001 and
their strategies for empowerment and survival.
We applaud and appreciate his strong sense of solidarity with workers
and constant struggle to raise the rights and living standards of all
workers regardless of origin. This is true international solidarity.
We were horrified and outraged to hear of the attack that happened on
July 10 to Gustavo Vera and La Alameda members. We strongly condemn the
thugs who attacked Gustavo and his companions of La Alameda in such a
cowardly way immediately after they carried out the necessary and
important work of rescuing workers from slave labour and exposing this
scourge of the country which ends up profiting large companies. We also
strongly question the role of the police, and urge that the police of
the city and of the country make a full investigation. We urge the
police and the government to ensure that the criminals who carried out
the attacks are found and punished, and that Gustavo Vera and the other
members of La Alameda are given medical care and protection from further
attacks.
/We also support the demands of La Alameda for the victims of
trafficking whom they rescued. We strongly urge that the city and
national government take responsibility by immediately making a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, closing the sweatshop
immediately, and suing the owner for violating the law on homebased
work, the law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and
trafficking in persons. Charges should brought against the owner of the
brand ‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. /
With all solidarity from AsiaWhile the attackers ran off, Gustavo Vera was brutally attacked and had
to be taken out from the crowd by the police. Five wounded were taken to
the hospital and various companions of La Alameda giving statements in
police station No. 40, two blocks from the sweatshop.
(http://laretaguardiaam770.blogspot.com/)
Gustavo now has 7 stitches in the head, a swollen face, a bandaged arm.
He said he's glad they could bring the workers out and they are now
safely at La Alameda. But don't ask where the secretary for human rights
or for assistance to victims of trafficking are, he said, because he
hasn't seen them.
Many of us in AMRC, ATNC Network and other groups in Hong Kong and rest
of Asia met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March
2009, when Asian countries were already many months into worsening
financial and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared
with us the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in
2001 and their strategies for empowerment and survival. /He also shared
how his organization La Alameda grew from a popular assembly to include
a worker-run cooperative and now keeps defending workers' rights by
exposing and helping workers where mainstream unions often don't reach -
trafficked migrant workers in hidden sweatshops, trafficked sex workers,
plantations where even children are forced to work.
/
/Since then, much more news has been reported about the July 10 attack
situation. Some of that news says:
- there were 20 machines and at least 10 people living in the small
sweatshop
- the daughter of one, a girl of 15, was abused by the owner
- two of the workers had been trafficked in directly from Bolivia to
this sweatshop just two weeks ago
- the sweatshop made bags and clothes for a garment shop owned by
Koreans (but note, the Korean was the final purchaser and also the
retailer in Argentina)
- the sweatshop was closed last year after an exposure protest but for
some reason continued producing
- the workers and people were kept enclosed in horrible living
conditions, dirty, poor food, exposed cables, toilet in terrible state
- they had to work from 7 a.m. to 23 p.m.
- the workers were paid US$0.92 per bag produced
/
/- The guy Ayala (who is known by the garment sweatshop workers and
called for the attack) has previously stopped an inspection. It seems
someone is protecting him, and he is totally above the law. However now
they have both sound recording and also a video recording showing him
and the other attackers -including Ayala saying "get me more people" and
policemen nearby were redirecting traffic and did not get more help,
saying 'we are only transit police', while the thugs were beating the
men and women to their heart's content. 40 people from La Alameda were
there while the thugs were more than double the number.
/
/La Alameda wants the Subscretary of Labour of the city to make a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, close the sweatshop
immediately, sue the owner for violating the law on homebased work, the
law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and trafficking in
persons. Extensive charges brought against the owner of the brand
‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. So far the victims are being taken care of by La Alameda.
/
/_*What you can do:
*_1. Please read the below statement and give your organization/name if
you wish to support!
/
/2. La Alameda requests donation for a carriage or two for the baby and
a marriage bed. These materials are destined for the familes that were
freed from the sweatshop. They need it urgently until they receive help
from the city or national government.
3. Organize an action at the Argentine Consulate in your country. Inform
us if you will do so - may//be our groups can do on a single date!
/
Regards
Doris
{DRAFT LETTER TO ARGENTINA AUTHORITIES FROM ASIAN WORKER GROUPS]
Att: Argentina Consulate in HK
1210 Jardine House, 1 Connaught Road Central, Hong Kong Special
Administraive Region, People's Republic of China
Tel: (852) 2523 3208 Fax: (852) 2877 0906
Attn: Cancilleria Argentina
Ministro Jorge Taiana
Jefe de Gobierno de la Ciudad Mauricio Macri
Presidente Cristina Kirchner
**
Esmeralda 1212, C1007ABR, Buenos Aires, Argentina - Tel. +54 (11) 4819-7000
Dear ______________,
It was brought to our attention that Gustavo Vera and at least seven
other activists from La Alameda in Buenos Aires, Argentina, were
attacked and wounded last night (July 10) after they went with
journalists to free workers and their families from a secret garment
sweatshop they had earlier identified. Though police were not far away,
they did not do the job of protecting people who are working on behalf
of all Argentinians to expose gross exploitation and enslavement of
workers in hidden sweatshops, for the profits of heartless companies
that fail to bear full responsibility.
La Alameda and Gustavo Vera have been working tirelessly and
relentlessly for many years on behalf of workers and against slavery,
and in recent months have made great media exposures of networks of
prostitution, of places disguised as bars, where women were found to
have been victims of trafficking, including minors. They exposed these
with the help of the cartoneros, with hidden cameras. They exposed the
use of dangerous chemicals in drycleaner chains owned by the sister of
politician Michetti. They have continually been working with formerly
entrapped migrant Bolivian workers rescuing other workers from hidden
sweatshops where they often have been trafficked in and kept to work for
long hours, low pay, and atrocious living conditions.
In Asia as well workers are forced to work long hours, with exposure to
health problems and often sexual harassment, and with no protection from
their national police, but rather often the terrorism and harassment of
their own police and of hired thugs, for their attempts to assert their
rights as workers.
We met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March 2009,
when Asian countries were already many months into worsening financial
and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared with us
the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in 2001 and
their strategies for empowerment and survival.
We applaud and appreciate his strong sense of solidarity with workers
and constant struggle to raise the rights and living standards of all
workers regardless of origin. This is true international solidarity.
We were horrified and outraged to hear of the attack that happened on
July 10 to Gustavo Vera and La Alameda members. We strongly condemn the
thugs who attacked Gustavo and his companions of La Alameda in such a
cowardly way immediately after they carried out the necessary and
important work of rescuing workers from slave labour and exposing this
scourge of the country which ends up profiting large companies. We also
strongly question the role of the police, and urge that the police of
the city and of the country make a full investigation. We urge the
police and the government to ensure that the criminals who carried out
the attacks are found and punished, and that Gustavo Vera and the other
members of La Alameda are given medical care and protection from further
attacks.
/We also support the demands of La Alameda for the victims of
trafficking whom they rescued. We strongly urge that the city and
national government take responsibility by immediately making a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, closing the sweatshop
immediately, and suing the owner for violating the law on homebased
work, the law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and
trafficking in persons. Charges should brought against the owner of the
brand ‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. /
With all solidarity from AsiaWhile the attackers ran off, Gustavo Vera was brutally attacked and had
to be taken out from the crowd by the police. Five wounded were taken to
the hospital and various companions of La Alameda giving statements in
police station No. 40, two blocks from the sweatshop.
(http://laretaguardiaam770.blogspot.com/)
Gustavo now has 7 stitches in the head, a swollen face, a bandaged arm.
He said he's glad they could bring the workers out and they are now
safely at La Alameda. But don't ask where the secretary for human rights
or for assistance to victims of trafficking are, he said, because he
hasn't seen them.
Many of us in AMRC, ATNC Network and other groups in Hong Kong and rest
of Asia met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March
2009, when Asian countries were already many months into worsening
financial and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared
with us the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in
2001 and their strategies for empowerment and survival. /He also shared
how his organization La Alameda grew from a popular assembly to include
a worker-run cooperative and now keeps defending workers' rights by
exposing and helping workers where mainstream unions often don't reach -
trafficked migrant workers in hidden sweatshops, trafficked sex workers,
plantations where even children are forced to work.
/
/Since then, much more news has been reported about the July 10 attack
situation. Some of that news says:
- there were 20 machines and at least 10 people living in the small
sweatshop
- the daughter of one, a girl of 15, was abused by the owner
- two of the workers had been trafficked in directly from Bolivia to
this sweatshop just two weeks ago
- the sweatshop made bags and clothes for a garment shop owned by
Koreans (but note, the Korean was the final purchaser and also the
retailer in Argentina)
- the sweatshop was closed last year after an exposure protest but for
some reason continued producing
- the workers and people were kept enclosed in horrible living
conditions, dirty, poor food, exposed cables, toilet in terrible state
- they had to work from 7 a.m. to 23 p.m.
- the workers were paid US$0.92 per bag produced
/
/- The guy Ayala (who is known by the garment sweatshop workers and
called for the attack) has previously stopped an inspection. It seems
someone is protecting him, and he is totally above the law. However now
they have both sound recording and also a video recording showing him
and the other attackers -including Ayala saying "get me more people" and
policemen nearby were redirecting traffic and did not get more help,
saying 'we are only transit police', while the thugs were beating the
men and women to their heart's content. 40 people from La Alameda were
there while the thugs were more than double the number.
/
/La Alameda wants the Subscretary of Labour of the city to make a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, close the sweatshop
immediately, sue the owner for violating the law on homebased work, the
law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and trafficking in
persons. Extensive charges brought against the owner of the brand
‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. So far the victims are being taken care of by La Alameda.
/
/_*What you can do:
*_1. Please read the below statement and give your organization/name if
you wish to support!
/
/2. La Alameda requests donation for a carriage or two for the baby and
a marriage bed. These materials are destined for the familes that were
freed from the sweatshop. They need it urgently until they receive help
from the city or national government.
3. Organize an action at the Argentine Consulate in your country. Inform
us if you will do so - may//be our groups can do on a single date!
/
Regards
Doris
{DRAFT LETTER TO ARGENTINA AUTHORITIES FROM ASIAN WORKER GROUPS]
Att: Argentina Consulate in HK
1210 Jardine House, 1 Connaught Road Central, Hong Kong Special
Administraive Region, People's Republic of China
Tel: (852) 2523 3208 Fax: (852) 2877 0906
Attn: Cancilleria Argentina
Ministro Jorge Taiana
Jefe de Gobierno de la Ciudad Mauricio Macri
Presidente Cristina Kirchner
**
Esmeralda 1212, C1007ABR, Buenos Aires, Argentina - Tel. +54 (11) 4819-7000
Dear ______________,
It was brought to our attention that Gustavo Vera and at least seven
other activists from La Alameda in Buenos Aires, Argentina, were
attacked and wounded last night (July 10) after they went with
journalists to free workers and their families from a secret garment
sweatshop they had earlier identified. Though police were not far away,
they did not do the job of protecting people who are working on behalf
of all Argentinians to expose gross exploitation and enslavement of
workers in hidden sweatshops, for the profits of heartless companies
that fail to bear full responsibility.
La Alameda and Gustavo Vera have been working tirelessly and
relentlessly for many years on behalf of workers and against slavery,
and in recent months have made great media exposures of networks of
prostitution, of places disguised as bars, where women were found to
have been victims of trafficking, including minors. They exposed these
with the help of the cartoneros, with hidden cameras. They exposed the
use of dangerous chemicals in drycleaner chains owned by the sister of
politician Michetti. They have continually been working with formerly
entrapped migrant Bolivian workers rescuing other workers from hidden
sweatshops where they often have been trafficked in and kept to work for
long hours, low pay, and atrocious living conditions.
In Asia as well workers are forced to work long hours, with exposure to
health problems and often sexual harassment, and with no protection from
their national police, but rather often the terrorism and harassment of
their own police and of hired thugs, for their attempts to assert their
rights as workers.
We met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March 2009,
when Asian countries were already many months into worsening financial
and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared with us
the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in 2001 and
their strategies for empowerment and survival.
We applaud and appreciate his strong sense of solidarity with workers
and constant struggle to raise the rights and living standards of all
workers regardless of origin. This is true international solidarity.
We were horrified and outraged to hear of the attack that happened on
July 10 to Gustavo Vera and La Alameda members. We strongly condemn the
thugs who attacked Gustavo and his companions of La Alameda in such a
cowardly way immediately after they carried out the necessary and
important work of rescuing workers from slave labour and exposing this
scourge of the country which ends up profiting large companies. We also
strongly question the role of the police, and urge that the police of
the city and of the country make a full investigation. We urge the
police and the government to ensure that the criminals who carried out
the attacks are found and punished, and that Gustavo Vera and the other
members of La Alameda are given medical care and protection from further
attacks.
/We also support the demands of La Alameda for the victims of
trafficking whom they rescued. We strongly urge that the city and
national government take responsibility by immediately making a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, closing the sweatshop
immediately, and suing the owner for violating the law on homebased
work, the law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and
trafficking in persons. Charges should brought against the owner of the
brand ‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. /
With all solidarity from AsiaWhile the attackers ran off, Gustavo Vera was brutally attacked and had
to be taken out from the crowd by the police. Five wounded were taken to
the hospital and various companions of La Alameda giving statements in
police station No. 40, two blocks from the sweatshop.
(http://laretaguardiaam770.blogspot.com/)
Gustavo now has 7 stitches in the head, a swollen face, a bandaged arm.
He said he's glad they could bring the workers out and they are now
safely at La Alameda. But don't ask where the secretary for human rights
or for assistance to victims of trafficking are, he said, because he
hasn't seen them.
Many of us in AMRC, ATNC Network and other groups in Hong Kong and rest
of Asia met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March
2009, when Asian countries were already many months into worsening
financial and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared
with us the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in
2001 and their strategies for empowerment and survival. /He also shared
how his organization La Alameda grew from a popular assembly to include
a worker-run cooperative and now keeps defending workers' rights by
exposing and helping workers where mainstream unions often don't reach -
trafficked migrant workers in hidden sweatshops, trafficked sex workers,
plantations where even children are forced to work.
/
/Since then, much more news has been reported about the July 10 attack
situation. Some of that news says:
- there were 20 machines and at least 10 people living in the small
sweatshop
- the daughter of one, a girl of 15, was abused by the owner
- two of the workers had been trafficked in directly from Bolivia to
this sweatshop just two weeks ago
- the sweatshop made bags and clothes for a garment shop owned by
Koreans (but note, the Korean was the final purchaser and also the
retailer in Argentina)
- the sweatshop was closed last year after an exposure protest but for
some reason continued producing
- the workers and people were kept enclosed in horrible living
conditions, dirty, poor food, exposed cables, toilet in terrible state
- they had to work from 7 a.m. to 23 p.m.
- the workers were paid US$0.92 per bag produced
/
/- The guy Ayala (who is known by the garment sweatshop workers and
called for the attack) has previously stopped an inspection. It seems
someone is protecting him, and he is totally above the law. However now
they have both sound recording and also a video recording showing him
and the other attackers -including Ayala saying "get me more people" and
policemen nearby were redirecting traffic and did not get more help,
saying 'we are only transit police', while the thugs were beating the
men and women to their heart's content. 40 people from La Alameda were
there while the thugs were more than double the number.
/
/La Alameda wants the Subscretary of Labour of the city to make a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, close the sweatshop
immediately, sue the owner for violating the law on homebased work, the
law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and trafficking in
persons. Extensive charges brought against the owner of the brand
‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. So far the victims are being taken care of by La Alameda.
/
/_*What you can do:
*_1. Please read the below statement and give your organization/name if
you wish to support!
/
/2. La Alameda requests donation for a carriage or two for the baby and
a marriage bed. These materials are destined for the familes that were
freed from the sweatshop. They need it urgently until they receive help
from the city or national government.
3. Organize an action at the Argentine Consulate in your country. Inform
us if you will do so - may//be our groups can do on a single date!
/
Regards
Doris
{DRAFT LETTER TO ARGENTINA AUTHORITIES FROM ASIAN WORKER GROUPS]
Att: Argentina Consulate in HK
1210 Jardine House, 1 Connaught Road Central, Hong Kong Special
Administraive Region, People's Republic of China
Tel: (852) 2523 3208 Fax: (852) 2877 0906
Attn: Cancilleria Argentina
Ministro Jorge Taiana
Jefe de Gobierno de la Ciudad Mauricio Macri
Presidente Cristina Kirchner
**
Esmeralda 1212, C1007ABR, Buenos Aires, Argentina - Tel. +54 (11) 4819-7000
Dear ______________,
It was brought to our attention that Gustavo Vera and at least seven
other activists from La Alameda in Buenos Aires, Argentina, were
attacked and wounded last night (July 10) after they went with
journalists to free workers and their families from a secret garment
sweatshop they had earlier identified. Though police were not far away,
they did not do the job of protecting people who are working on behalf
of all Argentinians to expose gross exploitation and enslavement of
workers in hidden sweatshops, for the profits of heartless companies
that fail to bear full responsibility.
La Alameda and Gustavo Vera have been working tirelessly and
relentlessly for many years on behalf of workers and against slavery,
and in recent months have made great media exposures of networks of
prostitution, of places disguised as bars, where women were found to
have been victims of trafficking, including minors. They exposed these
with the help of the cartoneros, with hidden cameras. They exposed the
use of dangerous chemicals in drycleaner chains owned by the sister of
politician Michetti. They have continually been working with formerly
entrapped migrant Bolivian workers rescuing other workers from hidden
sweatshops where they often have been trafficked in and kept to work for
long hours, low pay, and atrocious living conditions.
In Asia as well workers are forced to work long hours, with exposure to
health problems and often sexual harassment, and with no protection from
their national police, but rather often the terrorism and harassment of
their own police and of hired thugs, for their attempts to assert their
rights as workers.
We met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March 2009,
when Asian countries were already many months into worsening financial
and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared with us
the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in 2001 and
their strategies for empowerment and survival.
We applaud and appreciate his strong sense of solidarity with workers
and constant struggle to raise the rights and living standards of all
workers regardless of origin. This is true international solidarity.
We were horrified and outraged to hear of the attack that happened on
July 10 to Gustavo Vera and La Alameda members. We strongly condemn the
thugs who attacked Gustavo and his companions of La Alameda in such a
cowardly way immediately after they carried out the necessary and
important work of rescuing workers from slave labour and exposing this
scourge of the country which ends up profiting large companies. We also
strongly question the role of the police, and urge that the police of
the city and of the country make a full investigation. We urge the
police and the government to ensure that the criminals who carried out
the attacks are found and punished, and that Gustavo Vera and the other
members of La Alameda are given medical care and protection from further
attacks.
/We also support the demands of La Alameda for the victims of
trafficking whom they rescued. We strongly urge that the city and
national government take responsibility by immediately making a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, closing the sweatshop
immediately, and suing the owner for violating the law on homebased
work, the law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and
trafficking in persons. Charges should brought against the owner of the
brand ‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. /
With all solidarity from AsiaWhile the attackers ran off, Gustavo Vera was brutally attacked and had
to be taken out from the crowd by the police. Five wounded were taken to
the hospital and various companions of La Alameda giving statements in
police station No. 40, two blocks from the sweatshop.
(http://laretaguardiaam770.blogspot.com/)
Gustavo now has 7 stitches in the head, a swollen face, a bandaged arm.
He said he's glad they could bring the workers out and they are now
safely at La Alameda. But don't ask where the secretary for human rights
or for assistance to victims of trafficking are, he said, because he
hasn't seen them.
Many of us in AMRC, ATNC Network and other groups in Hong Kong and rest
of Asia met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March
2009, when Asian countries were already many months into worsening
financial and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared
with us the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in
2001 and their strategies for empowerment and survival. /He also shared
how his organization La Alameda grew from a popular assembly to include
a worker-run cooperative and now keeps defending workers' rights by
exposing and helping workers where mainstream unions often don't reach -
trafficked migrant workers in hidden sweatshops, trafficked sex workers,
plantations where even children are forced to work.
/
/Since then, much more news has been reported about the July 10 attack
situation. Some of that news says:
- there were 20 machines and at least 10 people living in the small
sweatshop
- the daughter of one, a girl of 15, was abused by the owner
- two of the workers had been trafficked in directly from Bolivia to
this sweatshop just two weeks ago
- the sweatshop made bags and clothes for a garment shop owned by
Koreans (but note, the Korean was the final purchaser and also the
retailer in Argentina)
- the sweatshop was closed last year after an exposure protest but for
some reason continued producing
- the workers and people were kept enclosed in horrible living
conditions, dirty, poor food, exposed cables, toilet in terrible state
- they had to work from 7 a.m. to 23 p.m.
- the workers were paid US$0.92 per bag produced
/
/- The guy Ayala (who is known by the garment sweatshop workers and
called for the attack) has previously stopped an inspection. It seems
someone is protecting him, and he is totally above the law. However now
they have both sound recording and also a video recording showing him
and the other attackers -including Ayala saying "get me more people" and
policemen nearby were redirecting traffic and did not get more help,
saying 'we are only transit police', while the thugs were beating the
men and women to their heart's content. 40 people from La Alameda were
there while the thugs were more than double the number.
/
/La Alameda wants the Subscretary of Labour of the city to make a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, close the sweatshop
immediately, sue the owner for violating the law on homebased work, the
law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and trafficking in
persons. Extensive charges brought against the owner of the brand
‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. So far the victims are being taken care of by La Alameda.
/
/_*What you can do:
*_1. Please read the below statement and give your organization/name if
you wish to support!
/
/2. La Alameda requests donation for a carriage or two for the baby and
a marriage bed. These materials are destined for the familes that were
freed from the sweatshop. They need it urgently until they receive help
from the city or national government.
3. Organize an action at the Argentine Consulate in your country. Inform
us if you will do so - may//be our groups can do on a single date!
/
Regards
Doris
{DRAFT LETTER TO ARGENTINA AUTHORITIES FROM ASIAN WORKER GROUPS]
Att: Argentina Consulate in HK
1210 Jardine House, 1 Connaught Road Central, Hong Kong Special
Administraive Region, People's Republic of China
Tel: (852) 2523 3208 Fax: (852) 2877 0906
Attn: Cancilleria Argentina
Ministro Jorge Taiana
Jefe de Gobierno de la Ciudad Mauricio Macri
Presidente Cristina Kirchner
**
Esmeralda 1212, C1007ABR, Buenos Aires, Argentina - Tel. +54 (11) 4819-7000
Dear ______________,
It was brought to our attention that Gustavo Vera and at least seven
other activists from La Alameda in Buenos Aires, Argentina, were
attacked and wounded last night (July 10) after they went with
journalists to free workers and their families from a secret garment
sweatshop they had earlier identified. Though police were not far away,
they did not do the job of protecting people who are working on behalf
of all Argentinians to expose gross exploitation and enslavement of
workers in hidden sweatshops, for the profits of heartless companies
that fail to bear full responsibility.
La Alameda and Gustavo Vera have been working tirelessly and
relentlessly for many years on behalf of workers and against slavery,
and in recent months have made great media exposures of networks of
prostitution, of places disguised as bars, where women were found to
have been victims of trafficking, including minors. They exposed these
with the help of the cartoneros, with hidden cameras. They exposed the
use of dangerous chemicals in drycleaner chains owned by the sister of
politician Michetti. They have continually been working with formerly
entrapped migrant Bolivian workers rescuing other workers from hidden
sweatshops where they often have been trafficked in and kept to work for
long hours, low pay, and atrocious living conditions.
In Asia as well workers are forced to work long hours, with exposure to
health problems and often sexual harassment, and with no protection from
their national police, but rather often the terrorism and harassment of
their own police and of hired thugs, for their attempts to assert their
rights as workers.
We met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March 2009,
when Asian countries were already many months into worsening financial
and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared with us
the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in 2001 and
their strategies for empowerment and survival.
We applaud and appreciate his strong sense of solidarity with workers
and constant struggle to raise the rights and living standards of all
workers regardless of origin. This is true international solidarity.
We were horrified and outraged to hear of the attack that happened on
July 10 to Gustavo Vera and La Alameda members. We strongly condemn the
thugs who attacked Gustavo and his companions of La Alameda in such a
cowardly way immediately after they carried out the necessary and
important work of rescuing workers from slave labour and exposing this
scourge of the country which ends up profiting large companies. We also
strongly question the role of the police, and urge that the police of
the city and of the country make a full investigation. We urge the
police and the government to ensure that the criminals who carried out
the attacks are found and punished, and that Gustavo Vera and the other
members of La Alameda are given medical care and protection from further
attacks.
/We also support the demands of La Alameda for the victims of
trafficking whom they rescued. We strongly urge that the city and
national government take responsibility by immediately making a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, closing the sweatshop
immediately, and suing the owner for violating the law on homebased
work, the law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and
trafficking in persons. Charges should brought against the owner of the
brand ‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. /
With all solidarity from AsiaWhile the attackers ran off, Gustavo Vera was brutally attacked and had
to be taken out from the crowd by the police. Five wounded were taken to
the hospital and various companions of La Alameda giving statements in
police station No. 40, two blocks from the sweatshop.
(http://laretaguardiaam770.blogspot.com/)
Gustavo now has 7 stitches in the head, a swollen face, a bandaged arm.
He said he's glad they could bring the workers out and they are now
safely at La Alameda. But don't ask where the secretary for human rights
or for assistance to victims of trafficking are, he said, because he
hasn't seen them.
Many of us in AMRC, ATNC Network and other groups in Hong Kong and rest
of Asia met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March
2009, when Asian countries were already many months into worsening
financial and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared
with us the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in
2001 and their strategies for empowerment and survival. /He also shared
how his organization La Alameda grew from a popular assembly to include
a worker-run cooperative and now keeps defending workers' rights by
exposing and helping workers where mainstream unions often don't reach -
trafficked migrant workers in hidden sweatshops, trafficked sex workers,
plantations where even children are forced to work.
/
/Since then, much more news has been reported about the July 10 attack
situation. Some of that news says:
- there were 20 machines and at least 10 people living in the small
sweatshop
- the daughter of one, a girl of 15, was abused by the owner
- two of the workers had been trafficked in directly from Bolivia to
this sweatshop just two weeks ago
- the sweatshop made bags and clothes for a garment shop owned by
Koreans (but note, the Korean was the final purchaser and also the
retailer in Argentina)
- the sweatshop was closed last year after an exposure protest but for
some reason continued producing
- the workers and people were kept enclosed in horrible living
conditions, dirty, poor food, exposed cables, toilet in terrible state
- they had to work from 7 a.m. to 23 p.m.
- the workers were paid US$0.92 per bag produced
/
/- The guy Ayala (who is known by the garment sweatshop workers and
called for the attack) has previously stopped an inspection. It seems
someone is protecting him, and he is totally above the law. However now
they have both sound recording and also a video recording showing him
and the other attackers -including Ayala saying "get me more people" and
policemen nearby were redirecting traffic and did not get more help,
saying 'we are only transit police', while the thugs were beating the
men and women to their heart's content. 40 people from La Alameda were
there while the thugs were more than double the number.
/
/La Alameda wants the Subscretary of Labour of the city to make a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, close the sweatshop
immediately, sue the owner for violating the law on homebased work, the
law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and trafficking in
persons. Extensive charges brought against the owner of the brand
‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. So far the victims are being taken care of by La Alameda.
/
/_*What you can do:
*_1. Please read the below statement and give your organization/name if
you wish to support!
/
/2. La Alameda requests donation for a carriage or two for the baby and
a marriage bed. These materials are destined for the familes that were
freed from the sweatshop. They need it urgently until they receive help
from the city or national government.
3. Organize an action at the Argentine Consulate in your country. Inform
us if you will do so - may//be our groups can do on a single date!
/
Regards
Doris
{DRAFT LETTER TO ARGENTINA AUTHORITIES FROM ASIAN WORKER GROUPS]
Att: Argentina Consulate in HK
1210 Jardine House, 1 Connaught Road Central, Hong Kong Special
Administraive Region, People's Republic of China
Tel: (852) 2523 3208 Fax: (852) 2877 0906
Attn: Cancilleria Argentina
Ministro Jorge Taiana
Jefe de Gobierno de la Ciudad Mauricio Macri
Presidente Cristina Kirchner
**
Esmeralda 1212, C1007ABR, Buenos Aires, Argentina - Tel. +54 (11) 4819-7000
Dear ______________,
It was brought to our attention that Gustavo Vera and at least seven
other activists from La Alameda in Buenos Aires, Argentina, were
attacked and wounded last night (July 10) after they went with
journalists to free workers and their families from a secret garment
sweatshop they had earlier identified. Though police were not far away,
they did not do the job of protecting people who are working on behalf
of all Argentinians to expose gross exploitation and enslavement of
workers in hidden sweatshops, for the profits of heartless companies
that fail to bear full responsibility.
La Alameda and Gustavo Vera have been working tirelessly and
relentlessly for many years on behalf of workers and against slavery,
and in recent months have made great media exposures of networks of
prostitution, of places disguised as bars, where women were found to
have been victims of trafficking, including minors. They exposed these
with the help of the cartoneros, with hidden cameras. They exposed the
use of dangerous chemicals in drycleaner chains owned by the sister of
politician Michetti. They have continually been working with formerly
entrapped migrant Bolivian workers rescuing other workers from hidden
sweatshops where they often have been trafficked in and kept to work for
long hours, low pay, and atrocious living conditions.
In Asia as well workers are forced to work long hours, with exposure to
health problems and often sexual harassment, and with no protection from
their national police, but rather often the terrorism and harassment of
their own police and of hired thugs, for their attempts to assert their
rights as workers.
We met Gustavo Vera in meetings in Thailand and Hong Kong in March 2009,
when Asian countries were already many months into worsening financial
and economic crisis and rising food and oil prices. He shared with us
the experience of workers under Argentina’s financial crisis in 2001 and
their strategies for empowerment and survival.
We applaud and appreciate his strong sense of solidarity with workers
and constant struggle to raise the rights and living standards of all
workers regardless of origin. This is true international solidarity.
We were horrified and outraged to hear of the attack that happened on
July 10 to Gustavo Vera and La Alameda members. We strongly condemn the
thugs who attacked Gustavo and his companions of La Alameda in such a
cowardly way immediately after they carried out the necessary and
important work of rescuing workers from slave labour and exposing this
scourge of the country which ends up profiting large companies. We also
strongly question the role of the police, and urge that the police of
the city and of the country make a full investigation. We urge the
police and the government to ensure that the criminals who carried out
the attacks are found and punished, and that Gustavo Vera and the other
members of La Alameda are given medical care and protection from further
attacks.
/We also support the demands of La Alameda for the victims of
trafficking whom they rescued. We strongly urge that the city and
national government take responsibility by immediately making a full
investigation of the sweatshop's situation, closing the sweatshop
immediately, and suing the owner for violating the law on homebased
work, the law on trafficking, and for reduction to servitude and
trafficking in persons. Charges should brought against the owner of the
brand ‘Susana L’ and the victims should be immediately given adequate
assistance. /
With all solidarity from Asia
|