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Jordan's Sweatshops: the
Carrot or the Stick of US Policy?
By Aaron Glantz
Special to CorpWatch
February 26, 2003
Amman, Jordan -- Syed Adil Ali walks across the ground floor of the two
story Silver Planet textile mill outside the Jordanian capital, Amman. The
Pakistani national points at a multi-colored pile of clothes ready to be
shipped to the United States.
"This is an order for Wal-Mart," he says. "It's shorts. Boy's shorts. We
export for all the big US retailers. Target, Wal-Mart and JC Penny."
While the world focuses on a potential war on Iraq and the future of
country's vast untapped oil resources, US companies of a different kind are
rapidly extending their influence throughout the Arab world. Under the terms
of its 1994 peace agreement with Israel and its newly inked Free Trade
Agreement with the United States, Iraq's neighbor Jordan has seen a massive
increase in clothing manufacturing for the US market.
Qualified Industrial Zones
Three years ago, not a single textile mill in Jordan exported to the big US
retailers. Today, there are more than 40 thousand workers, toiling in more
than 60 factories producing solely for the US market. Washington inserted a
provision into Jordan's 1994 peace agreement with Israel giving Jordan
permission to export products duty free to the United States, provided at
least eight percent of their industrial inputs come from Israel. These
special factories are located in Jordan's Qualified Industrial Zones (QIZs).
"The QIZs are very important to the American government," says Zaid Marar,
spokesperson for the Al-Tajamout QIZ which houses the Silver Planet factory.
"Jordan is a buffer state between Israel and its hostile Arab neighbors so
its very important that Jordan's economy be linked with the U.S. economy."
Late last year, Assistant Deputy Secretary of State Elizabeth Cheney paid a
visit to the Al-Tajamout compound. The State Department official is also the
daughter of Vice President Dick Cheney. "Jordan is a strategic tool for both
the US and Israel," Marar says, noting the importance of the visit.
And yet, Jordanians own almost none of the factories. Most are owned and
operated by entrepreneurs from China, Taiwan, Korea, India, Pakistan or the
Philippines who import workers from over-seas.
Of the some 40 thousand workers employed in these Qualified Industrial
Zones, fewer than half are Jordanian. Ninety percent are women under the age
of 22, and almost all of them pay the minimum wage, about $3.50 a day.
Factory owner Syed Adil Ali says his factory only contracts Sri Lankan
girls.
"They are very peace minded girls," he says. "I found some kind of problem
with the boys. They made some kind of union, some kind of disturbance in the
factory. So we prefer the girls."
There is no union at Syed's factory which earns more than 2 million dollars
a year in profits. He is planning on adding a third floor and hundreds more
workers.
Poor Living and Working Conditions
Zaid Marar drives his blue BMW around the Al-Tajamout Qualified Industrial
Zone. The public relations official displays the living quarters for the
thousands of foreign workers housed at the industrial park. He says the
dormitories comply with the minimum human rights standards permitted by US
retail giants.
"There are 80 people per floor, ten rooms in each," Marar explains. "There
are eight people per room and five and a half square feet of space for each
according to J.C. Penny's specifications."
Syed Adil Ali's work force of 600 is housed in one of these army-barracks
style buildings. They are required to live on the factory grounds -- far
away from the city. Because of their sixty five-hour workweek, the workers
rarely leave the complex. The company provides for their basic needs. For
most of these workers, the company even supplies their only source of food
and drinking water.
Immigrant Workers Have Few Rights
Close to 50 Indian men stand outside one of Amman's main police stations
where they tried to file a complaint against their employer. Apparently
their grievance fell on deaf ears.
One of the workers shakes his head. "Jordan is very bad," he says. "(There
are) no rules, no factory rules."
The workers say their boss at the Al-Tajamout Qualified Industrial Zone
refused to pay them for three months, refused to feed them for a week and
then fled Jordan for the Philippines. Their factory, Tamashi Industries,
manufactured the Simply Basic line of children's clothing for Wal-Mart.
"Three months no pay, no food," screams one of the workers. "Bad, bad, bad,
very bad."
The workers make significantly more than they would in India. Here, the
average wage in a garment factory is about $3.50 a day, compared to about
$2.50 a day in India. But in Jordan, the workers have no rights.
Factory owners work with agents in South and East Asia to locate workers
interested in coming to work in Jordan. They apply to the Jordanian Ministry
of Labor for visas which restrict them to working only for the factories
that bring them. Then, they buy the worker a one-way ticket to Amman.
When the employer is finished with the worker, he buys the worker a ticket
home. When employees try to start a union, as 120 Bangladeshis did last
month, they are summarily deported.
Because the owner fled the country, the Indian workers from Tamashi
Industries are stuck in Jordan with no work permit and no way to get home.
"I want to go back to India," one of the workers says standing in front of
the police station, "But I have no ticket, no ticket. No work permit to
work."
Under New Management
Tamashi Industries will reopen under the ownership of Elias Jamil Bashara.
The Filipino businessman is the brother of Levana Fadicaram, the man who
skipped the country without paying his workers. The factory has a new name
now, Alven Fashion Manufacturing, but the building, the machines, and even
the office telephone number are the same. The biggest concern for the
factory manager, Mazen Baghdadi, is the four weeks of lost production time
caused by the chaos.
"But soon we will have an order for Wal-Mart or Target and we will start up
again," he notes cheerfully.
Baghdadi says the company is looking for a new crop of foreign workers. "We
had some Indian workers but they left," he says. He says he doesn't know
which country the next group of workers will come from, "Maybe China, maybe
the Philippines, Sri Lanka or Bangladesh."
Free Trade Carrot and Sanctions Stick
Jordan's Textile Trade Union has no problem with the current situation. The
union's President, Falthalla Omrani flew to Washington for the Free Trade
Agreement's signing ceremony. "You have to start somewhere," he says.
"Jordan needs foreign investment. We need factories." Analysts here say that
for decades the government has controlled unions here, with more militant
activists languishing in prison for years.
Overwhelmingly, though, Jordanians oppose both the Free Trade Agreement with
the United States and the peace treaty with Israel. Most Jordanians would
like to bring back the trading regime that was in place before George Bush
Sr. declared war on Iraq in 1991. Before the Gulf War sanctions, Jordan ran
a brisk $1.2 billion trade with Iraq. Now, that trade has been cut by more
than half. The official unemployment rate is 20 percent. Most observers
think the real rate is much higher.
In the Bacca Palestinian refugee camp outside Amman, locally owned factories
that used to sell to Iraq are shuttered, their work-force laid off, their
equipment for sale.
Navri Sarisi is President of a community center at the Bacca Camp. Like many
people here, he believes the United States is trying to set up a
relationship between Israel and Jordan similar to the one between United
States and Mexico. He notes the minimum wage in Israel is eight times the
minimum wage in Jordan.
"The trade agreements came by force of the United States," he says, "and the
best example are these Qualified Industrial Zones. The Israelis are
investing money in very cheap labor where people work long hours. They are
getting free access to the U.S. market duty free and customs free and this
contributed largely to the collapse of the locally based industry."
When the US launched its war on Iraq in 1991, Jordan took a massive hit.
King Hussein refused to support the American invasion and in retaliation the
Bush Senior Administration cut off all US aid. With trade with Iraq a
fraction of it once was, the country has been forced to turn to the West --
to Israel and the United States -- for economic partners. Critics worry that
this comes at a high political cost.
"The government (of King Abdullah) is trying to shift Jordan from a pro-Arab
country to a country that gives in to what Bush wants and what (Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel) Sharon." says leading opposition politician Laith
Spilat.
Dr. Ibrahim Aloosh is more blunt. The US trained economist publishes an
on-line magazine called the Free Arab Voice. "They're turning Jordan into a
colony for the United States and the Zionist entity," he explains. "And if
you say Iraq won't be next you got to be kidding me."
Aaron Glantz, Producer of Free Speech Radio News, is currently reporting on
the war on Iraq from Turkey and Jordan.
Source:
http://www.corpwatch.org/issues/PID.jsp?articleid=5688 |
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