Human rights tribunal hears allegations of abuse and low pay against clothing companies that supply high street stores
Workers making clothes that end up in the stores of the biggest names
on the British high street have testified to a shocking regime of
abuse, threats and poverty pay. Many workers in Indian factories earn so
little that an entire month's wages would not buy a single item they
produce.
Physical and verbal abuse is rife, while female workers
who fail to meet impossible targets say they are berated, called "dogs
and donkeys", and told to "go and die". Many workers who toil long hours
in an attempt to support their families on poverty wages claim they are
cheated out of their dues by their employers.
The allegations, which will be of concern to household names including Gap, H&M, Next
and Walmart, were made at a human rights tribunal in the southern
Indian city of Bengaluru. The "national people's tribunal for living
wages and decent working conditions for garment workers" was convened to
investigate widespread human rights abuses in the garment industry.
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