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Article

20 Nov 2023

Author:
Worker Rights Consortium

Thailand: Hong Seng Knitting wage theft case summary

2023

WRC affiliate universities have continued to engage with Nike on this case. However, Nike’s position remains unchanged. It continues to ignore overwhelming evidence of worker coercion reported by the WRC, asserting that thousands of workers at Hong Seng voluntarily chose to forgo wages that they were legally owed. In support of its position, Nike cites an audit it commissioned from a for-profit contract monitoring firm, Elevate, but Nike refuses to show this report to the WRC and the university community.

Hong Seng continues to refuse to provide back pay to the affected workers and continues to refuse to pay meaningful compensation to the Burmese migrant worker who was forced to flee the country after management reported him to the police for protesting management’s theft of workers’ wages. The amount owed to more than 3,300 affected workers is now more than $800,000, due to interest on unpaid wages mandated by Thai law.

2021

Through documents, worker interviews, and written exchanges with factory management, the WRC uncovered an illegal wage theft scheme at Hong Seng Knitting, carried out by the factory from May through October 2020. The factory coerced workers to acquiesce to this scheme and retaliated against workers who spoke up against it. The factory has deprived workers of nearly $600,000 in legally mandated wages, an average of $172, or more than 15 days’ wages, per worker.

The violations stemmed from the factory’s desire to evade a law that sustains workers’ income during periods of low production. Under the law, if a factory temporarily suspends workers, it has to pay them a reduced wage, so workers still have some income to support their families. When the pandemic caused orders to drop, Hong Seng wanted to suspend workers but did not want to pay the legally required partial wage. To avoid paying, management compelled workers to sign a form falsely stating that they wanted to take voluntary unpaid leave. Management then used the falsified forms to justify depriving workers of their pay. There is overwhelming evidence that the leave was involuntary and that the scheme was illegal. This includes credible testimony from numerous workers that they were pressured to sign the leave forms and a ruling from the Thai government that the forms do not constitute a lawful basis to deny workers their wages.

When some workers resisted the scheme, management responded with threats of dismissal and other forms of retaliation and intimidation. Most egregious, factory management retaliated against one worker, a Burmese migrant, by reporting him to the police. The worker had expressed concerns about the nonpayment of wages to other workers via Facebook messenger. Fearing unjust imprisonment in a country where police treatment of migrant workers is often both arbitrary and brutal, the worker was compelled to flee the country, along with his wife and infant son.

The WRC has engaged with Nike extensively regarding this case, beginning in August of 2020. Unfortunately, while Nike has acknowledged that some violations occurred, it has only supported corrective action in a small number of cases, representing less than one percent of affected workers. Our report discusses Nike’s position in depth and includes a statement from Nike, but, in short, it is Nike’s position that most workers volunteered to take unpaid leave, even though all of them could have chosen to be paid. Nike has not offered an explanation for why thousands of workers would freely choose to give up wages to which they were legally entitled. The WRC is continuing to engage with buyers at this time.

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