Voicing anger against the alleged mistreatment of Thai laborers in Kaohsiung, labor groups yesterday scuffled with police in front of the Council of Labor Affairs' (CLA) headquarters as they demanded council Chairwoman Chen Chu (陳菊) be held to account for a riot on Sunday night.
Chanting "No slavery!" and "Down with exploitation," about 50 members of the Taiwan International Workers' Association, the Committee for Action for Labor Legislation and the Catholic Hope Workers' Center gathered outside the council's offices yesterday in a show of support for the Thai workers.
The groups were also protesting the Kaohsiung Rapid Transit Company's handling of the incident and what they called the Council of Labor Affairs' "indifference."
PHOTO: CNA
"We think the Thai workers' disturbance was totally legitimate because they have endured inhuman treatment and swallowed insults for so long. What they did was to revolt against abuse," said Wong Ying-dah (汪英達), policy director at the Chinese Federation of Labor.
"But the council turned a deaf ear to their misery and did nothing about the treatment they received, which may actually involve criminal behavior," Wong said.
Taiwan International Workers' Association chairwoman Chen Su-hsiang (陳素香) said that the council had been hesitant in dealing with disputes involving foreign laborers. It and other labor groups called on Chen Chu to provide an explanation for the incident and promise that she would undertake to address the various problems facing foreign workers.
"We regret that ever since the incident in which former New Party legislator Elmer Fung (馮滬祥) raped his Filipina housekeeper, Chen Chu never showed up when we asked to see her. She has never responded to us in concrete terms," she said.
Scuffles between the protesters and police broke out when the former attempted to fix placards on the door of the council's headquarters. Police pushed the protesters back and tore up the placards.
"All we do is put up our placards and see how they treat us. This is how they also treat the laborers!" Wang yelled.
Lek Yimprasert, coordinator of the Thai Labor Campaign, joined the protest and urged the authorities to treat unequal treatment of Thai workers seriously.
"Taiwanese employees always call Thai workers "buffalo," but all they are asking for is to be treated just like other human beings," Yimprasert said.
Vice President Annette Lu (
Lu, convener of the Presidential Office's Human Rights Advisory Committee, said the incident had tarnished Taiwan's human-rights record and damaged the nation's image.
"I greatly regret that this has occurred. I will not allow similar things to happen in the future. I hope all workers involved can return to [work as] normal. A comprehensive investigation will be carried out as soon as possible. We will continue to welcome foreign workers to help with construction in Taiwan," Lu said.
She said that since 2000, when the Democratic Progressive Party took power, several universal values including human rights had been prominent on its agenda. She said that protection of those values should not be selectively applied according to nationality, age or sex.
Meanwhile, Premier Frank Hsieh (謝長廷) said that businesses should not import labor in order to save money.
"When a Taiwanese laborer is available, we should not sacrifice a local laborer's legal right to work and hire a foreign laborer instead. We should not hire a foreign hand just because an employer wants to save money," Cabinet Spokesman Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰) quoted Hsieh as saying.
But Hsieh also expressed appreciation toward foreign laborers.
"We must acknowledge their help, appreciate their contribution and take care of them while we must," he said.
"These people have contributed a lot to this country in terms of construction work," he added.
Hsieh urged employers and the council to pay more attention to the daily needs of foreign workers.
"Try to think about things from their point of view. These people have traveled so far to come to Taiwan and work for us. There is no question that we must take good care of them. This is only proper," he said.
A group of Taiwanese-American and Tibetan-American students at Harvard University on Saturday disrupted Chinese Ambassador to the US Xie Feng’s (謝鋒) speech at the school, accusing him of being responsible for numerous human rights violations. Four students — two Taiwanese Americans and two from Tibet — held up banners inside a conference hall where Xie was delivering a speech at the opening ceremony of the Harvard Kennedy School China Conference 2024. In a video clip provided by the Coalition of Students Resisting the CCP (Chinese Communist Party), Taiwanese-American Cosette Wu (吳亭樺) and Tibetan-American Tsering Yangchen are seen holding banners that together read:
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