Friday, September 11, 2009

UN extremely concerned about Sri Lanka's detention of staff members



UNITED NATIONS - THE United Nations on Thursday called on Sri Lanka to respect the human rights of two UN employees who have been held without charge since June on suspicion of collaborating with Tamil separatists.

'The UN has been and is extremely concerned about the continuing case of the two national UN staff members detained by the Sri Lankan authorities in June,' deputy UN spokesman Marie Okabe said.

She said the two men, both Tamils, had been travelling in the area around Vavuniya, an embattled northern town that served as a de facto front line in the decades-old civil war that climaxed with a massive offensive in May by Sri Lankan troops who defeated the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

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Friday, September 11, 2009

SRI LANKA: Women want better pay, Out of Free Trade Zones



By Amantha Perera - (IPS) - The room is dingy and cramped. The walls are unplastered and its rough cement edges can scrape the skin easily. Furniture is strewn all over the place, plastic chairs stacked one on top of the other, boxes on top of them, handbags hanging from the wall and clothes on a rack. A small kerosene cooker is kept on the side of the room while a bicycle is parked next to the only bed in the 10-by-10-feet room.

This is home to 26-year-old Anoma Piyaselee and her husband, who works as a welder that entitles him to a salary less than hers.

Piyaselee is one of some 52,000 migrant women workers scraping by on their meagre salaries in Sri Lanka’s industrial hubs, formally known as Free Trade Zones (FTZs), where factories are set up under various tax benefits and other incentives that sometimes undermine labour rights.

According to Stand-up, a civil society group made up of former and current FTZ workers, more than 90 percent of the workforce at Katunayake FTZ consists of women whose ages range from 18 to 30. Jobs, mostly garments-related, are intended primarily for them. The few males employed are either machine operators or in higher-paying positions.

Piyaselee’s story echoes those of many others in FTZs. Not only do they endure harsh living conditions, they also constantly struggle with the agony of being away from their families. And no matter the long hours spent at work, their paltry wages will never be enough to sustain their families’ basic needs. Many more will have similar stories, others more tragic perhaps. Piyaselee is at least a survivor of the grind looking for a way out.

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