FOX News : Health

30 June, 2012

The University of British Columbia
Media Release | Jun. 20, 2012

UBC research receives $2.9 million to improve nutrition of rural Cambodian women and children

The University of British Columbia and Helen Keller International of Cambodia have received $2.9 million from the Canadian International Food Security Research Fund (CIFSRF) for research to increase and diversify food production and nutrition for small, rural households in Cambodia.

29 June, 2012

Ghana: Any Link Between MDGs and CSR? U.T. Bank Holds Answers

Allafrica
By Ebenezer T. Hanson, 25 June 2012

The topic above is likely to elicit this question, thus, "What has Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) got to do with Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)?" It arises as a result of not taking time to identify the strangeness in the familiarity of things. But UT Holdings and its subsidiaries such as UT Bank are demonstrating in an indisputable manner that it is possible to employ CSR as an instrument to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

28 June, 2012

SDGs will replace MDGs in 2015


Daily News:Sri Lanka's National Newspaper
Disna MUDALIGE
28 June 2012

A list of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) would replace the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) from 2015, as agreed by the world representatives at the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20), Environment Ministry Secretary B M U D Basnayake told the Daily News yesterday. He said: "All the representatives agreed to this move and provide their contribution to develop SDGs to be implemented in both developing and developed countries.

27 June, 2012

PH garments can grow

Malaysia Business Insight
Written by AMADO P. MACASAET
15 June 2012

The local garments industry is picking up, leading export growth in the first four months of the year and helping compensate for the downturn in electronics exports.

Industry leaders said that the Philippine garments industry has bigger chances of growing faster.

26 June, 2012

RON DERBY: Bring clothing manufacturers closer to SA market

Business Day
RON DERBY
2012/05/25


For a country such as SA, with a stubbornly high unemployment rate, any advantage that could be in duced by boosting labour-intensive industries such as clothing and textile needs to be exploited


WANTED, Cosmopolitan, True Love and GQ magazines, carrying the latest trends from across the globe, may just have a greater use to SA than helping fashion novices like myself dress in a more appropriate manner. Keeping up with the times, or at the very least being not too behind them, may just be the salvation that our labour-intensive local clothing manufacturers need. (Even more than the very short-term gain of a weaker currency.)

25 June, 2012

ITMAs 2015 Exhibition to Focus on Sustainable Innovation

Apparel.edgl.com
By Jordan Speer, Editor in Chief
18 June 2012

ITMA, the long-running textile and garment machinery exhibition, will spotlight the innovations that promote sustainability for its 17th presentation in Milan in 2015. A trendsetting showcase of exciting innovations since 1951, the theme chosen for the 2015 edition is "Master the Art of Sustainable Innovation."

Stephen R. Combes, president of CEMATEX, which owns the show, said, "The drive towards sustainability is increasingly integrated with enlightened business practices. The keyword here is 'sustainability', and we hope industry members will join us in this responsible mission to promote more eco-friendly solutions and practices for the entire textile and garment value chain."

24 June, 2012

Garment, textile exports rise by 6%

Viet Nam News
21 June 2012


HA NOI — Viet Nam expected to earn about US$7.5 billion from exports of fibre, textile and garment in the first half of this year, up 6 per cent against the same period last year.

In reality, the quantity of garment products exported increased 12 per cent from the corresponding time because of lower prices on the global market.

"This reflected great efforts by the textile and apparel sector in the face of the global economic crisis," said Le Tien Truong, deputy director-general of the Viet Nam National Textile and Garment Group (Vinatex) in an online conference held by the group in Ha Noi, Da Nang and HCM City.

23 June, 2012

Violent clashes at Bangladesh garment protests

Source: http://india.nydailynews.com/
Wednesday, June 13th 2012


Nearly 50,000 Bangladeshi garment workers staged violent demonstrations on Wednesday demanding an increase in wages. The workers manufacture clothes for Walmart, H&M and Tesco, putting in 10-16 hours shift, six days a week.

22 June, 2012

Bangladesh’s garment exports take a dip

Knitting Industry
18th June 2012, Dhaka

According to Bangladesh’s leading newspaper The Daily Star, exports from the country fell for the third straight month in May. The data was released by the state-owned Export Promotion Bureau (EPB) last week.

The newspaper reports that businesses blamed the slowdown in exports on a drop in demand for clothing in the Eurozone, which is now wrestling with a debt crisis. Readymade garments are the prime foreign currency earner for Bangladesh and the EU is the biggest market for its clothing.

21 June, 2012

Violence shuts 300 Bangladesh garment factories


Reuters
DHAKA, Sat Jun 16, 2012


(Reuters) - The owners of 300 Bangladesh garments factories shut their operations indefinitely on Saturday after days of violent pay protests by workers, threatening the country's biggest export already impacted by the global downturn.

The decision to close all factories at Ashulia, one of the country's biggest industrial zones on the outskirts Dhaka, came as talks between workers and owners had failed to break the deadlock.

Yangon’s Gold Rush

CNBC
By: Kaori Enjoji
Tokyo Bureau Chief
14 June 2012

In a country where reportedly a quarter of the population lives in poverty and 70 percent live without electricity, a bubble sounds like an odd way to describe what is happening in a part of Myanmar. If the ultimate trophies for international investors are the nation’s rich resources, such as natural gas, tungsten and gems, let’s just call it a gold rush.

Promise of jobs spurs development debate in Haiti

Newsobserver.com
By JACQUELINE CHARLES - McClatchy Newspapers
12 June 2012

CARACOL, Haiti -- It's precisely the kind of development that just about everyone has been saying Haiti needs: foreign governments pooling dollars to build housing, create jobs and foster hope.

But a $300 million investment to help create tens of thousands of textile jobs in this rural northern village has reignited debate over whether banking on Haiti's past as a garment assembly capital will bring the kind of social and economic development needed to lift the country out of abject poverty. Some argue the funds are better invested in agricultural projects to feed the country and boost farmers.

16 June, 2012

Are Western Consumers Willing to Pay More for Apparel?

Source: PBS News Hour 

14 June 2012

The transcript and vidoe are posted on PBS Website. 

Fred de Sam Lazaro reports on the working conditions in Cambodia's garment industry, which exports much its clothing to the United States.


JUDY WOODRUFF: Next, labor unrest in Cambodia's clothing factories. Workers are calling for fewer hours, better conditions and higher wages. That raises a question: Are Western consumers ready to pay more for apparel?

Special correspondent Fred de Sam Lazaro reports.

A version of this story aired recently on the PBS program "Religion & Ethics Newsweekly."

FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Back in the 1990s, Cambodia, impoverished and rebuilding after its genocidal Khmer Rouge years, took steps to give its new garment industry a competitive leg up. It agreed to a system of labor standards, with minimum wages and a limit on working hours, union representation and freedom of expression.

All would be open to international inspection. Today, there are perhaps 400,000 garment workers in more than 300 factories in and near the capital, Phnom Penh, subcontractors to retailers and brands across Europe and North America.

14 June, 2012

Cambodia takes $430m China loan

The Phnom Penh Post
Thursday, 14 June 2012
By Rann Reuy

Cambodia yesterday signed deals for about US$430 million in loans from China, the latest in a number of high-profile borrowing deals with its northern neighbour.

The bulk of the loans, from Export-Import Bank of China, would go towards two national road projects and a multipurpose dam in Battambang, according to documents obtained by the Post.

An extension on the rehabilitation of National Road 6 alone was set to cost about $250 million.

07 June, 2012

Better worker food needed: Survey

The Phnom Penh Post
Wednesday, 06 June 2012
Stuart Alan Becker

A new study has determined that cost and space are the biggest constraints to setting up canteens in Cambodia’s garment factories.

The findings were presented on Monday night at a cocktail party attended by Cambodia’s former ambassador to the US, Roland Eng, the Swedish Ambassador Anne Höglund, Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia Chairman Van Sou Ieng, Rami Sharaf of RMA Asia and many others.

Sandra D’Amico of HR Inc, who’s company BD link carried out the study, gave the presentation and spoke afterwards to explain the significance of the findings.

“Garment factory owners are very concerned about the nutrition and health of their workers. However they do not feel they should carry the burden of the cost,” D’Amico said. “However, factories lack information and understanding around professional food service providers like Hagar.”

The study was undertaken on behalf of Hagar and financed by Better Work Cambodia, the International Labor Organization (ILO) and D’Amico’s company, HR Inc.

The study covered 35,000 garment factory workers during a three month period this year.

“Nutrition impacts productivity, that’s a fact,” D’Amico said. “Better health, concentration, learning, stamina and strength: all of that is needed to perform.”

She said many factory workers now got their meals from food service stalls outside factory gates where the food was not fresh and hygienic.

“From the perspective of improving health generally for workers, something needs to be done to improve the quality of services.”

D’Amico said one innovative option that was explored by the study was a joint canteen facility, where government, employers, unions and factories would all come together to create facilities and subsidise meals for the workers.

“Such a facility needs to be explored better as to feasibility and willingness to participate,” she said.

D’Amico thinks there’s a misperception in general about how much factory workers genuinely earn.

She said there’s also a problem that many factory workers send more money than they should to their family members in the provinces, often at the expense of their own health.

“I think public information from radio, TV, newspapers that this target group reads needs to give people the information they need to look after themselves effectively. They need to know if they eat bad food what that is going to mean for them in the long run.”

D’Amico said she hoped to see more innovation with snacks so that workers could get vitamins and iron they might not otherwise get.

“The issue of nutrition is serious because it has long-term consequences and the impact is huge from a social security perspective. The whole topic is unbelievably important. I think everybody has a responsibility, government, unions, civil society, the public sector, they have an obligation to talk about these issues, and to promote healthy eating.”

D’Amico said the survey shows that it is necessary to maintain a cost base given that providing canteen services in factories is a massive up-front investment.

“If you increase cost base significantly, it increases cost to buyers, and we are in a very volatile, fragile environment where people don’t understand what the impact is going to be on Cambodia. Factories have genuine and real concerns about maintaining jobs and sustainability of the operations they have,” she said.

D’Amico said she hopes more studies would be done on nutrition and health in the garment sector.

“What we do know from the government health survey is that one in 15 women is too thin,” she said. “We can really benefit from more information on nutrition health on productivity issues.”

The survey found that factory managers believe that nutrition and productivity are linked and feel that employers should not carry the burden of nutrition alone.

Seventy-five per cent of factories provide basic medical care for workers and 33 per cent of factories were providing private medical insurance to workers.

“Most factories do not have canteens and factory managers feel they should be involved in challenges related to nutrition and healthcare, so there is a great need for training linked to productivity in the sector because managers need to understand the issues around nutrition and health.”

The survey found that most factory workers eat outside the factory gate.

Sixty per cent of factories believed that workers spent from 1,000 to 2,000 riels for every meal, with breakfast and lunch being the cheapest and dinner the most expensive.

“There should be cleaner facilities or public sector interventions, to increase cleanliness and hygiene,” she said.

D’Amico said 56 per cent of factories said they would be interested to provide one meal, but they needed to be shown a positive change in productivity.

“We asked factory managers if they were interested in joint canteen facilities, and servicing a bigger number of workers. In summary, we can say that factory managers are very concerned about health and nutrition issue. The feasibility of canteens is less given concerns of space, and there is a real need for factories to have information on cost and productivity if they were to be interested in providing meals,” D’Amico said.

“If government unions and employers would come together to support joint facilities, they could do cost sharing of infrastructure and a subsidy of the meals is worth further investigation,” she said.

“We also need to get more information to factory managers and we need public sector intervention in improving food services outside the factory gates.”

Third party canteens favoured by GMAC

The Phnom Penh Post
Wednesday, 06 June 2012
Stuart Alan Becker

The Chairman of the Garment Manufacturers Association of Cambodia, Van Sou Ieng, said that even if nutrition is an important factor in productivity, it should not the sole responsibility of the factory owner.

“The deduction that the nutrition will automatically improve productivity is not necessarily true. When people are healthy it is better. You can be very healthy and still be lazy,” he said.

Speaking after a Monday night cocktail party at Hagar Catering & Facilities Management to celebrate the launch of the Canteen Nutritional Study, Van Sou Ieng said unions would be less likely to raise such issues against factories if the catering facilities were operated by third parties.

“The best out of this study is that we have an independent provider of food. Hopefully, we will have more standardised, qualified food suppliers that provide proper nutrition and it is not the responsibility of the employers to pay for it.”

Van Sou Ieng said it was for better factories not to get involved in food production.

“If we get involved in food production and food quality, this is not our profession and it will be criticised and it can be abused. That’s why we are reluctant, but we are happy to have third-party independent suppliers.”

Van Sou Ieng said there were 2,600 trade unions in Cambodia for only 500 factories.

“Each trade union is an entrepreneur. We don’t want to fight the unions. We want to work with unions that respect the law. There is a confederation of unions in Cambodia who we work with very well and they comply and respect the law,” Van Sou Ieng said.

“There are only a few that are funded internationally that create problems. Others are abusing the system to make money. We are not here to work against the trade union. We are looking for a responsible trade union that obeys the law, complies with the law and represents the workers demands.”

Van Sou Ieng said he hoped more factories would use the services of third-party canteen suppliers.

“The benefit of today is that for factories wishing to engage and help their workers, we have an independent source of nutrition that they will not be subject to abuse by the trade unions to criticise the employers. I hope more employers will use these services.”

Also at the event was French catering specialist Thibault Paul Favre who has been hired by Hagar Catering & Facilities Management to develop the firm’s catering business, which already produces 7,000 meals per day, 3,000 of which are in the garment factory sector.

“No need to have one kitchen in the city and then to travel,” Favre said.

“It is useless to carry water and food. Our vision is to develop canteens on site. We are not only operating the canteen, but we now have 18 customers and among those, 12 have a kitchen on site.”

Focusing mainly on breakfast and lunch, the meals cost about 3,000 riels and contain 2,000 calories.

“We advise the kitchen; we know the quality of usage, and we can advise properly. We want to solve these problems and let them concentrate on their work.”

One of the customers is the factory that produces goods for the Marks & Spencer brand name, he added.
សារព័ត៌មានអន្តរជាតិInternational News

BBC News - US & Canada

CNN.com - RSS Channel - HP Hero

Top stories - Google News

Southeast Asia Globe

Radio Free Asia

Al Jazeera – Breaking News, World News and Video from Al Jazeera

NYT > Top Stories

AFP.com - AFP News

The Independent

The Guardian

Le Monde.fr - Actualités et Infos en France et dans le monde

Courrier international - Actualités France et Monde