Forced labour rampant in Uzbekistan cotton harvest

News

Health care workers toiling in the cotton fields of Uzbekistan are to be joined by third- and fourth-year university students forced by the government to labour in the country’s annual autumn harvest, according to stories compiled by the Uzbek-German Forum for Human Rights.

The non-profit organisation has also highlighted news that minors again may be forced into picking cotton.

Each harvest season, the government mobilises more than one million residents to the pick cotton through systematic coercion, “with profits benefiting the government elite rather than the people,” according to a statement by the Cotton Campaign, a coalition of organisations that includes the US labour rights NGO Solidarity Center.

Uzbekistan has cut back on the use of child labour in its cotton fields following worldwide condemnation, but during the 2014 harvest, the government mobilised more public employees than in previous years, most likely to make up for fewer child labourers according to the 2015 Uzbek-German Forum report.

From September through October, many classrooms are shut down because teachers are amongst those forced to pick cotton. Health clinics and hospitals are unable to function fully with so many health care workers also toiling in the fields.

This year, the government of Uzbekistan is expected to make US$1 billion in profit from cotton sales, money that disappears into an extra-budgetary fund in the Finance Ministry to which only the highest-level officials have access, according to the report.

At least 17 people died and numerous people were injured in last year’s cotton harvest due to poor or unsafe working and living conditions. Workers are forced to toil long hours often without access to clean drinking water and typically work without crucial safety and health gear, exposed to toxic pesticides and dangerous equipment.

“Food is not provided. Everyone must bring their own bread and tomatoes,” says one health care worker. “The cotton is very low. In the sand there are a lot of snakes.”

Many employees are threatened with loss of employment, loss of utilities and other public services, fines and criminal prosecution if they do not participate in the cotton harvest. Those who refuse to participate in the cotton harvest may even see their pensions and other work benefits cut.

Uzbek police twice assaulted human rights monitor Elena Urlaeva this year, once in May for documenting forced labour in the cotton fields and again in August for distributing pamphlets explaining laws that prohibit forced labour.

In July, the US State Department boosted the ranking of Uzbekistan in its Trafficking in Persons report, moving it up to the ‘Tier 2 Watchlist’. The designation means the State Department claims Uzbekistan does not fully comply with the US Trafficking Victims and Protection Act (TVPA) standards but is making significant efforts to become compliant.

In its 2014 report, the State Department ranked Uzbekistan as ‘Tier 3’, the lowest designation that means it does not fully comply with the minimum TVPA standards.

Earlier this year, the Solidarity Center was among 30 global unions, business associations and nonprofit networks urging the US State Department to ensure its Trafficking in Persons report accurately reflect the serious, ongoing and government-sponsored forced labour in Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.

United Nations (UN) Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said during a June visit to Uzbekistan that more must be done now to address “the mobilisation of teachers, doctors and others in cotton harvesting, and prevent the maltreatment of prisoners.”

Dozens of labour and human rights groups had sent a letter to Ban Ki-moon urging him to raise the issue of forced labour.

 

This article was first published on the Solidarity Center website.