FIDH in the framework of the Cotton Campaign urges the ILO to press the Uzbek government to end forced labor

22/07/2015
Communiqué

O July 21, 2015, in the framework of the Cotton Campaign, FIDH and 35 trade unions, business associations, investors and human rights organizations addressed the letter below to the International Labour Organization, and copies to the International Organisation of Employers (IOE), International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC), and World Bank. In the letter, we the Cotton Campaign call on the ILO, its members the IOE and ITUC, and the World Bank to press the government of Uzbekistan to end forced labor at a meeting scheduled this August.

Mr. Guy Ryder
Director-General
International Labour Organization
4 route des Morillons
CH-1211 Genève 22
Switzerland

Dear Mr. Ryder :

In advance of the ILO’s August roundtable with the government of Uzbekistan, we write to express our appreciation for the ILO’s continuing efforts to advance the application of international labour standards in Uzbekistan. In light of the Uzbek government’s continued systematic use of forced labour, however, we also urge the ILO to use the upcoming meeting to again press the Uzbek government to fully apply Conventions No. 29 and 105.

This spring, human rights monitors in Uzbekistan have again reported that the Uzbek government forced students and state employees to prepare fields for planting, including in World Bank project areas.[1] In May, the government arrested and brutalized Elena Urlaeva for documenting forced labour in the cotton fields.[2] This follows well-documented reports that during last fall’s harvest the government forced farmers to meet state quotas for cotton production and forced more than a million of its own citizens to pick cotton.[3] With these human rights violations, the government has demonstrated that it has yet to alter its forced labor system of cotton production, detailed in Appendix 1.

At your upcoming meeting with representatives of the Government of Uzbekistan to discuss the results of the ILO’s survey of recruiting practices in the agricultural sector and next steps we urge ILO to :

1. Insist that the Government of Uzbekistan agree to a credible ILO monitoring of forced labour beginning this fall ;
2. Insist that the Uzbek authorities also allow monitoring by independent Uzbek civil society without threat of harassment and assure access for domestic and international media to investigate and report on conditions in the cotton sector ;
3. Should the Government of Uzbekistan refuse to allow credible monitoring of forced labour and a feedback mechanism in World Bank project areas or the ILO become aware of forced or child labour in World Bank project areas, we expect the ILO will so inform the World Bank since independent, third-party monitoring and ceasing loans if there is forced or child labour in project areas are covenants in the loan agreements between the World Bank and government ; and
4. Publicly report out on the roundtable meeting, including the ILO’s survey of recruitment practices and its findings, proposed plan of action to apply ILO conventions No. 29 and 105, and agreements on next steps regarding the application of ILO conventions in Uzbekistan.

We look forward to hearing from you about the results of the roundtable and plans for next steps in its aftermath.

Sincerely,
The Cotton Campaign, a global coalition of labor, human rights, investor and business organizations coalesced to end forced labor of children and adults in the cotton sector of Uzbekistan

Advocates for Public Interest Law
American Apparel & Footwear Association
AFL-CIO
American Federation of Teachers
Anti-Slavery International
Aquinas Associates
Association for Human Rights in Central Asia
Australian Council of Trade Unions
Bennett Freeman, former U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor
Boston Common Asset Management
Calvert Investments
Daughters of Charity, Province of St Louise
Dignity Health
Dominican Sisters of Hope
Environmental Justice Foundation
The Eurasian Transition Group, e.V.
FIDH | Fédération internationale des ligues des droits de l’Homme | International Federation for Human Rights
International Labor Rights Forum
Korean Teachers and Education Workers Union
Mercy Health
Mercy Investment Services
Portfolio Advisory Board, Adrian Dominican Sisters
Responsible Sourcing Network
Retail Council of Canada
St. Joseph Health
Shareholder Association for Research and Education
Solidarity Center
Stop the Traffik
Sukhrob Ismoilov, Uzbek human rights advocate
Textile Clothing and Footwear Union of Australia
Uniting Church in Australia, Synod of Victoria and Tasmania
U.S. Fashion Industry Association
Ursuline Sisters of Tildonk,U.S. Province
Uzbek-German Forum for Human Rights
Walden Asset Management
Walk Free

CC : Mr. Kari Tapiola, Special Adviser to the Director-General, ILO
Ms. Corinne Vargha, Chief of the Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work Branch, ILO
Mr. Daniel Funes de Rioja, President, International Organisation of Employers (IOE)
Ms. Linda Kromjong, Secretary-General, IOE
Mr. João Antonio Felicio, President, International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC)
Ms. Sharan Burrow, General Secretary, ITUC
Mr. Saroj Kumar Jha, Regional Director for Central Asia, World Bank

Appendix : “The System of Forced Labor Cotton Production in Uzbekistan”

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