153 Dân Biểu Hoa Kỳ:
Muốn tham gia TPP, Việt Nam phải tôn trọng quyền lao động
Mạch Sống, ngày 30 tháng 5, 2014
http://machsong.org
Ghi chú: Vào đây để vượt tường lửa: http://anonymouse.org/anonwww.html
Tại buổi họp báo lúc 2 giờ chiều ngày hôm qua, các dân biểu
Hoa Kỳ công bố văn thư đ̣i hỏi Đại Sứ Michael Froman, Đại Diện Mậu Dịch Hoa Kỳ,
phải bảo đảm quyền lao động trong thương thảo Hợp Tác Xuyên Thái B́nh Dương
(TPP). Trong đó Việt Nam là một quốc gia cần quan tâm đặc biệt. Tổng cộng có
153 vị dân biểu thuộc Đảng Dân Chủ đă đồng kư tên. Kèm theo đây là thông cáo báo
chí từ văn pḥng của DB George Miller về buổi họp báo này.
Một văn thư khác do dân biểu thuộc Đảng Cộng Hoà đang được
luân lưu để lấy chữ kư. Văn thư này gửi cho Tổng Thống Barack Obama và đặt nhiều
điều kiện nhân quyền nếu Việt Nam muốn tham gia TPP.
Lúc 1pm cùng ngày, Tiểu Ban về Nhân Quyền Quốc Tế của Quốc Hội
Canada có buổi điều trần về chính sách đối ngoại của Canada và t́nh trạng nhân
quyền ở Việt Nam. Tham dự buổi điều trần có Ts. Lê Duy Cấn và Cô Nguyễn Khuê-Tú
đại diện Liên Hội Người Việt Canada và Ts. Nguyễn Đ́nh Thắng, Giám Đốc BPSOS.
Ngoài ra c̣n có ba nhà đấu tranh ở trong nước điều trần qua video. Các đề nghị
cho chính quyền Canada cũng tương tự như đối với Hoa Kỳ: Qua TPP, đ̣i hỏi chính
quyền Việt Nam phải cải thiện nhân quyền.
Sau buổi điều trần phái đoàn người Việt đă họp riêng với hai
dân biểu Canada để bàn kế hoạch hành động cụ thể cho thời gian từ giờ đến cuối
năm.
Ts. Thắng cho biết sẽ mở rộng nỗ lực đẩy lùi TPP cho Việt
Nam, nếu như không có sự cải thiện nhân quyền, đến nhiều quốc gia đang thương
thảo TPP.
Bai lien quan:
Thời Điểm Thuận Lợi Cho Nhân Quyền
http://machsong.org/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=2863
Press Office: 202-226-0853
Thursday, May 29, 2014
153 House
Democrats to USTR Froman: Protect Workers’ Rights in TPP Negotiations
WASHINGTON,
DC—More than 150 House Democrats today called on United States Trade
Representative Michael Froman to do more to protect and strengthen
international workers’ rights as part of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)
negotiations.
Led by Reps.
George Miller (D-Calif.), Mark Pocan (D-Wisc.), Loretta Sanchez
(D-Calif.), and Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.), 153 Democratic
Representatives sent a letter to
Ambassador Froman asking that the ongoing TPP negotiations include an enhanced
framework for protecting international human and labor rights—especially for
the countries of Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei, and Mexico, which have lengthy
histories of violating workers’ rights. The signatories are seeking strong,
enforceable plans to ensure that these future U.S. trading partners abide by
core international labor standards.
“We must
do everything possible to prevent the American marketplace from being flooded
with imports manufactured by workers laboring without human dignity and
individual rights,” the members wrote. “The Administration must refrain from
validating such woefully inadequate labor norms and the final agreement should
be withheld until these countries embrace the need to reform their labor laws
and move aggressively to implement them.”
Reports
from the Departments of Labor and State show major abuses of human and worker’s
rights in the aforementioned countries, including: forced labor and child
labor; pregnancy and gender-based discrimination; health and safety hazards;
excessive working hours; and inadequate wages. The representatives are asking
for significant structural and measurable changes to address these offenses in a
meaningful way before a final TPP agreement emerges.
Read the full text of the letter below:
May 29, 2014
The Honorable Michael Froman
United States Trade Representative
600 17th Street NW
Washington, DC 20508
Dear Ambassador Froman:
As you know, protecting the rights of working
people in the United States and abroad is a key priority for us in developing
American trade policy. For this reason, we were very alarmed by the recent
AFL-CIO report, “Making the Colombia Labor Action Plan Work for Workers,” which
detailed ongoing abuses of worker rights in Colombia. We believe that it is
crucially important that you take action to ensure better outcomes in our
ongoing negotiation of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), particularly in
countries that have lengthy histories of denying workers their rights, such as
Vietnam.
“Making the Colombia Labor Action Plan Work for
Workers” contained a number of troubling findings, including that the LAP has
not eliminated or significantly reduced violence against unionists, that
illegal and abusive forms of subcontracting persist, and that little has been
done to sanction employers for violating laws designed to protect the right to
organize and bargain collectively. Given how important the goals of the LAP
are, we believe that more work must be done to effectively monitor progress in
achieving them and in evaluating measurable outcomes that demonstrate
effectively where progress has occurred and where additional work is needed.
Yet, as important as enhancing monitoring and enforcement in Colombia is, it is
also critical to ensure that ongoing TPP negotiations lead to improved outcomes
for workers in the TPP based on basic labor rights and human dignity.
In this context, we were alarmed by recent
reports in Vietnamese media that Truong Dinh Tuyen, the former Vietnamese
Minister of Trade and current senior advisor on international negotiations,
said that Vietnam would not accept a TPP requirement that workers be allowed to
establish independent labor unions, but would instead accept a compromise that
devolved some power to local unions.[1] While we are pleased to see that
Vietnamese officials are beginning to realize that continuation of the
country’s flagrant violations of core labor standards—which has been documented
at length by the Departments of Labor and State—is unacceptable, we were
concerned that Mr. Tuyen seems to believe that halfway measures will be
adequate. That is not the case. All TPP member nations, including Vietnam, must
fully comply with TPP labor obligations, including those related to freedom of
association and collective bargaining.
In countries like Vietnam in which workers have
faced extraordinary abuses, there must be binding and enforceable plans to
bring those countries’ laws and practices into compliance with TPP labor
requirements. Those plans must be made public, and the changes to the laws and
practices must be fully implemented, before Congress takes up TPP for
consideration, while trade benefits granted by the agreement must be contingent
on the plans’ continued implementation. In countries such as Vietnam,
where the labor regime must be substantially transformed, an additional
mechanism is needed to link those benefits to Vietnam’s regular demonstration
of the effective enforcement of its new law laws.
It is clear that Vietnam, in particular, must do
substantial work to achieve a minimally acceptable level of respect for
workers’ rights for a trading partner of the United States. Vietnamese law
requires that all unions in the country be affiliated with the Vietnam General
Confederation of Labor, which describes itself as “a member of the political
system under the leadership of the Communist Party of Vietnam,” and in so doing
violates workers’ rights to form and join independent labor unions of their own
choosing. Meanwhile, the Department of Labor lists Vietnam as one of just four
countries where there is reason to believe that garments might have been
produced by forced or indentured child labor.
Three other TPP countries also appear to be home
to violations of core labor standards that merit binding compliance plans to
ensure that they are in accordance with international labor standards. In
Malaysia, the Department of State reports that rights to freedom of association
and collective bargaining are “severely restricted,” including prohibitions on
union membership by workers in several sectors, significant limits on the right
to strike, and governmental interference in union registration. The
Department of Labor lists the country as a source of garments and palm oil
which it has reason to believe are produced with forced labor, and the
Department of State notes that sources reported occurrences of forced labor in
a number of industries, including agriculture, fishing, electronics factories,
construction, and others. In Brunei, concerns about freedom of
association also persist, including Department of State documentation of a
prohibition on strikes and a failure of the law to protect workers who face
dismissal related to union activities. The Department of State also found
lax enforcement of protections of foreign workers, including “credible reports”
of migrant workers “paying the equivalent of two months’ wages to fictitious
employers to obtain labor passes.” Brunei also just recently adopted Sharia
Law, with penalties that include flogging, dismemberment, and stoning, raising
much broader human rights issues, as well as basic concerns about sex-based
discrimination in employment. And in Mexico, the Department of State
notes that protection unions, and the protection contracts they sign,
“continued to be a problem in all sectors, and many observers noted that a
majority of workers in unions belonged to unrepresentative unions.” These
issues must be addressed in a serious and meaningful way in order for the TPP
to move forward. We must do everything possible to prevent the American
marketplace from being flooded with imports manufactured by workers laboring
without human dignity and individual rights. The Administration must refrain
from validating such woefully inadequate labor norms and the final agreement
should be withheld until these countries embrace the need to reform their labor
laws and move aggressively to implement them.
As such, we believe that it is critically
important that the TPP provide for an enhanced framework for protecting
workers’ rights to help ensure that the agreement benefits the middle class in
this country and protect the rights of workers of our trading partners. In the
particular cases of the four countries mentioned above, strong, enforceable
plans are needed in addition to robust and fully enforceable labor provisions
in the TPP text to achieve that outcome and to ensure compliance with
international core labor standards.
Thank you in advance for your consideration of
our views. We look forward to your response.
Sincerely,
George
Miller
Mark Pocan
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
Loretta
Sanchez
Sander M. Levin
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
Henry A.
Waxman
Rosa L. DeLauro
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
Janice D.
Schakowsky
John Conyers Jr.
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
Steve
Israel
John D. Dingell
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
John
Garamendi
John P. Sarbanes
Member of Congress
Member of Congress
Barbara
Lee
Corrine Brown
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
Brad Sherman
Bobby L. Rush
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
Jerrold
Nadler
Joe Courtney
Member of Congress
Member of Congress
Marcy Kaptur
Steve Cohen
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
Eleanor Holmes Norton
Peter A. DeFazio
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
Charles B.
Rangel
Nick J. Rahall
Member of Congress
Member of Congress
Keith
Ellison
Louise McIntosh Slaughter
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
Gene
Green
Luis V. Gutiérrez
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
Lucille
Roybal-Allard
Paul Tonko
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
John F. Tierney
Richard M. Nolan
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
Adam
Smith
Brian Higgins
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
Bill Pascrell, Jr.
Katherine Clark
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
Collin C.
Peterson
Adam B. Schiff
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
Peter J.
Visclosky
Maxine Waters
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
Lois Capps
Gwen Moore
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
Tim Ryan
Michael H. Michaud
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
Gloria Negrete McLeod
Theodore E. Deutch
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
Sam Farr
Raúl M. Grijalva
Member of Congress
Member of Congress
Carol
Shea-Porter
William L. Enyart
Member of
Congress
Member of Congress
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