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Artigo

14 Set 2020

Author:
Tula Connell, Solidarity Centre

Tunisia: Labor movement calls on government, employers and brands to urgently address challenges faced by textile workers during COVID-19

Solidarity Centre.

"GARMENT WORKERS NEED OUR ASSISTANCE, TUNISIA LABOR MOVEMENT TELLS EMPLOYERS, GOVERNMENT", September 9th
Some 160,000 workers, the vast majority of whom are women younger than age 35, work in Tunisia’s textile industry, which accounts for 34 percent of the country’s manufacturing sector. Following the country’s coronavirus lockdown, workers lost jobs and pay, in part because the industry experienced a 45.2 percent decline in textile exports in March from the previous year, according to the National Institute of Statistics in Tunisia. Many corporate brands also canceled “mid-season” orders...

.. employers also took advantage of the COVID-19 crisis to cease or suspended paying workers’ social security benefits or family allowances, such as food tickets, under the pretext of force majeure, union leaders say. Employers coerced workers.. into signing fixed-term contracts and giving up their status as permanent workers. Workers also say some employers blocked their efforts to form unions to gain fundamental rights on the job, closed union offices—prohibiting workers from meeting in the office even outside working hours—and removed posters and other legally placed union material from worksites.