Mexico rescues 129 workers, including children, 'abused' at garment factory
Source: Agence France-Presse
Mexico rescues 129 workers, including children, 'abused' at garment factory
Posted 7 minutes ago
Thu 5 Feb 2015, 8:08pm
Mexican authorities have rescued 129 workers, including six children, who said they were exploited and physically and sexually abused at a garment factory.
Four South Korean nationals have been handed over to prosecutors in the western state of Jalisco, after workers identified them as the owners or managers of the company named Yes International, the National Migration Institute (INM) said.
Authorities raided the company in the town of Zapopan on Wednesday after receiving an anonymous tip-off, INM coordinator Ardelio Vargas Fosado told reporters.
Mr Fosado described the South Korean nationals as a "gang of suspected human traffickers".
Officials rescued 121 women and eight men, including six minors who were 16 and 17 years old.
The workers told prosecutors that they were "victims of physical and sexual abuse, as well as threats, psychological harm and gruelling work days," Mr Fosado said.
Read more: http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-02-06/mexico-rescues-129-workers-from-factory/6075492
NaturalHigh
(12,778 posts)Now it's time for the people in charge to go to jail.
"Four South Korean nationals have been handed over to prosecutors in the western state of Jalisco"...
I hope they don't manage to buy their way out of this.
1StrongBlackMan
(31,849 posts)But, I would far rather the corporation that these workers were sewing the stuff for be fined out of existence. It wouldn't take many US corporations that sale the product of sweat-shop labor being fined out of existence for the practice to end.
The middle-man labor industry (that insulates the purchaser), like in any other criminal enterprise, is unafraid of/undeterred by the threat of imprisonment and is easily replaceable.
When the practice stops being profitable (heavily fined ends profitability), or that profit is drastically penalized (fined out of existence), the practice will cease.
Judi Lynn
(160,542 posts)It was not the first time that authorities found workers abused by employers in Jalisco.
In 2013, police rescued at least 275 people, including 39 teenagers, who were held in slave-like conditions in a camp in Toliman, where tomatoes were sorted and packed for export.
The victims were rescued when a worker escaped and made it to Jalisco's state capital to file a complaint.
The tomato farm's workers were kept in overcrowded housing and were paid half of what had been offered, much of it delivered in vouchers redeemable at the company store, where items were sold at a high mark-up.
The old "company store" trick. Mining companies did the same thing to U.S. miners for ages before, through what must have seemed like divine intervention, they got help from this vicious exploitation by US corporations. It must mean there were some cleaner Congressmen along the way, somewhere.
Omaha Steve
(99,638 posts)K&R!
appalachiablue
(41,132 posts)FLPanhandle
(7,107 posts)"Low Prices Everyday"