
 |
| |
While
we are on the subject of evil... HISTORICAL
EVIL:
"The Triangle Fire," by Leon Stein with a new introduction
by William Greider. (Cornell University Press, 2001.)
EVIL
IN THE RAG TRADE:
"NO SWEAT: Fashion, Free Trade, and the Rights of Garment
Workers," edited by Andrew Ross. (Verso Press 1997.)
BORDERLINE
EVIL:
"Border Witness," by Maureen Casey and Brian Casey. (The New
York State Labor-Religion Coalition, 2002).
COSMIC
EVIL:
"Evil in Modern Thought: An Alternative History of Philosophy,"
by Susan Neiman. (Princeton U. Press, 2002.)
|
|
|
|
 |
 |
> NO SWEAT NEWS >
ARTICLES
A reprimand for Reebok
Continued
Dita spent the first few months of her incarceration as the only
woman in a criminal facility. She said she survived the harsh conditions
-- barely edible food, no blankets, no clocks, no radios, no reading
materials and, for women, no maxi pads -- with the help of other
inmates. "The prisoners had read about me in the papers. They
had this picture of me, 'she's different from the rest of us. She's
not in for narcotics, she's not a killer, she's not a chicken stealer
or a brawler.' They brought me food at night so I wouldn't have
to live on the rations."
Dita received a six-year sentence after her April 1997 trial, and
was moved to a mixed-sex prison where she soon helped inmates organize
a protest against "rubber-like meat and the extortion and harassment
of visitors." The protest culminated in the inmates setting
fire to the prison and the guards stripping the women to their underwear
and beating them one by one. Dita was accused of inciting the riot
and put under special guard. The only times she was allowed outside
the walls were for a 45-minute visit to her mother's deathbed and
a trip to the hospital after she contracted typhoid, a disease spread
by fecal-oral contamination, from the prison food. She was finally
pardoned in July 1999 by B.J. Habibie, Suharto's successor.
Dita explained that, given this history, her rejection of Reebok
was far from sudden. "In 1997 they kept asking for my C.V.,"
she says, noting that a fellow human rights activist visited her
repeatedly in jail to ask for her personal data. "He said it
was for the Nobel prize," Dita recalled. "It turned out
it was for Reebok. But nobody gave him the data because back then
everyone who knew me was too disoriented, they were in hiding underground.
There was nobody to organize that Nobel kind of stuff. For what,
anyway? Even my father was working really hard at it, saying, 'Dita,
Reebok wants to give you $10,000, where's your photo, where's this
and that?' I told him, 'Oh, forget about it, Papi.'"
Despite Dita's seeming lack of interest, Reebok continued to keep
its eye on her. In January 1999, after Dita's cause had been picked
up by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, Reebok's CEO,
Paul Fireman, wrote a letter to Habibie requesting Dita's unconditional
release from prison. In an interview with the Asian Wall Street
Journal, Fireman said, "I did it because Ms. Dita Sari's imprisonment
made it difficult for Reebok to honor our commitment to respect
the human rights, including the right to organize, of the nearly
30,000 workers in Indonesia who produce our footwear. ... The Indonesian
workers who produce Reebok products cannot truly be free to organize
and bargain collectively while their representatives are imprisoned
or the subject of government harassment."
Dita laughs now at the mention of the letter, saying that Reebok
knew full well what kind of country it was operating in when it
first opened its factories.
When Dita heard about the Human Rights Award in December 2001, her
first response was that she should take the money and divide it
among Reebok workers and use her time on the Salt Lake City podium
to speak out against the company's labor practices. But after being
informed that there was a series of P.R. events scheduled for the
days before the awards ceremony, she wrote to Reebok and declined.
"I said to Reebok, 'We know how you treat your workers in the
Third World. I know because I helped organize them and carried out
actions with them. We know you once paid your workers less than
a dollar a day when your sneakers were selling for a hundred and
that you rented the police to destroy us. Understanding this, we
feel that it isn't appropriate for you to put the lid on the wrongs
you've committed toward workers by giving this kind of award.'"
Dita had a point. In the mid-1990s, as the anti-sweatshop campaign
was blasting industry leader Nike for its treatment of Third World
workers, Reebok began to rebrand itself as the sneaker with a heart.
In 1999 Reebok announced it would begin paying Indonesian workers
24.3 percent above the legal minimum wage. It also released a lengthy
report by a consultancy firm that criticized conditions in Reebok-producing
factories, promising improvements.
But despite all this, the contrast between Reebok corporate health
and its Indonesian workers' well-being has become more pronounced,
not less. Paul Fireman is one of the highest-paid corporate executives
in America, earning an estimated $3.2 million in 2000. His house
is worth approximately $12 million and his yacht, Solemates, another
$35 million. (If he sold just the yacht and bought a Honda 125cc
motorbike, which is what Dita drives, he could pay his entire Indonesian
workforce of 30,000 over a year's worth of wages.) And although
Reebok had a few bad years in the '90s, its stock has gone up 400
percent since January 2000, and in 2001 it posted a 27 percent rise
in net income. Meanwhile, most Indonesian workers have experienced
a drop in their standard of living. When Dita was arrested and beaten
for leading a strike against Reebok, its workers were making around
$36 a month. Now they're making around $75, but the price of basic
goods has almost tripled. It's doubtful that Paul Fireman can imagine,
while soaking up the sun from the deck of his yacht, what it would
be like to pay half a day's wages for a bottle of kids cough syrup.
Why Reebok would want Dita Sari onboard its human rights campaign
train is easy enough to answer: She makes for good brand. She may
not be Venus Williams, whose new endorsement contract with Reebok
is reportedly worth $40 million over five years. But she adds a
bit of activist clout to Reebok's competition against sweatshop
villain Nike.
Why, though, would Reebok give an award to someone who showed no
signs of wanting one? Did the company really not know Dita's track
record on Reebok? It's not talking. Maybe it has come to believe
its own hype, or maybe it figured that just like its thousands of
Indonesian workers, who stitch and glue sports shoes because a less
than living wage is better than nothing, Dita Sari would be willing
to play along for the prestige -- and for the money.
But $50,000 represents a lifetime of sweat for most Indonesians.
And Dita Sari knows it.
|
|