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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-27-06 07:13 PM
Original message
US arrest of island employer 'legal'
US arrest of island employer 'legal'

December 28, 2006 10:43am

US officials acted correctly in arresting a brutal garment factory owner in the remote South Pacific island of American Samoa and sending him 3700 km to Hawaii to face trial, a Federal Appeals Court ruled today.

Factory owner Kil Soo Lee was accused of mistreating his workers from Vietnam, China and American Samoa, barring them from leaving for days at a time, under-feeding them and ordering beatings of disobedient workers.

After local authorities failed to investigate complaints against him, Federal authorities arrested Lee in 2001 and flew him to Hawaii.

He was ultimately sentenced to 40 years imprisonment for holding his workers in involuntary servitude and other crimes.
(snip/...)

http://www.news.com.au/mercury/story/0,22884,20981549-5007063,00.html

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


So how would it seem this arrangement is any different from Tom DeLay's beloved Marianas Islands sweatshop operation?
DeLay's North Pacific Unregulated "Paradise"

As Tom DeLay preached his pro-business/anti-regulation theology in the US, his model of perfection was far from the mainland. The U.S. protectorate of the Northern Mariana Islands -- 14 islands in the North Pacific -- have become something of a free-enterprise petting zoo for DeLay and those he wishes to convert to his way of thinking.

At the end of World War II, the U.S. acquired the islands, which are located off the coast of booming Asia. To encourage development and self-sufficiency Congress exempted the islands from the very kinds of U.S. business regulations and oversight DeLay despised. Even today the island's minimum wage is only $3.05. Other work and safety regulations either do not apply at all or are rarely enforced.

In short, the Marianas embodied many of the key ideals DeLay and other House Republicans were pushing in their 1994 Contract With America.

For Asian sweatshop operators, the Marianas became the Promised Land incarnate. Since the islands were officially U.S. territory, garment factories there were able to tag their products with the coveted "Made in the USA" label. No rules, no regulators, no inspectors, no health and safety laws. What more could a sweatshop operator ask for?

The opportunity was quickly recognized by Asian sweatshop operators like Hong Kong's Tan Holdings, run by garment mogul Willie Tan. Deep in the lush jungles, far from the island's white beaches and luxury hotels, garment factories quickly set up shop. They staffed their factories with workers from China and the Philippines with promises of work in the US. But, workers soon discovered that the work contracts they signed consigned them to near-indentured servitude deep in the Marianas steamy jungles. Wages were low, hours were long. The companies docked workers' pay for housing, food, medical treatments and other charges. The low wages and high deductions made it nearly impossible for workers to save enough money to return home.

None of this was a secret back home in the U.S. In 1998, ABC, CNN, the BBC and the New York Times each confirmed reports of forced labor, sex slaves and domestic forced servitude among the Marianas' so-called "guest workers."
(snip/...)
http://www.alternet.org/story/13140/

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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-27-06 07:14 PM
Response to Original message
1. More DeLay Marianas sweatshop information
Wednesday, January 4th, 2006
Forced Abortions & Sweatshops: A Look at Jack Abramoff's Ties to the South Pacific Island of Saipan & How Tom DeLay Became An Advocate for Sweatshop Factory Owners
~snip~
We turn now to Abramoff’s special relationship with the South Pacific island of Saipan and how it connects to his ties to House Majority Leader Tom DeLay. Saipan is an American territory in the South Pacific also known as the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands. In the mid-1990s Abramoff was on the payroll of Saipan officials aiming to stop legislation that would crack down on sweat shop conditions, which run rampant on the island. In 1997, Abramoff arranged a lavish trip to the island of Saipan for Delay.

The Delay trip was originally reported by Brian Ross, Chief Investigative Correspondent for ABC News. We are going to play 2 excerpts from the report that aired on ABC’s 20/20 on March 13th, 1998. In this first excerpt, Ross interviews Allan Stayman, a Clinton administration official in the Department of Interior who was investigating labor conditions in Saipan. Brian also talks to a worker in one of the factories and ends with Eric Gregoire, a human rights worker. Most of the workers in these factories are from mainland China. {Thanks to WITNESS/Oxygen for providing addittional footage.)

We are joined on the phone by ABC News' Brian Ross.

Brian Ross, Chief Investigative Correspondent for ABC News

RUSH TRANSCRIPT
This transcript is available free of charge. However, donations help us provide closed captioning for the deaf and hard of hearing on our TV broadcast. Thank you for your generous contribution.
Donate - $25, $50, $100, more...

AMY GOODMAN: I'm going to play two excerpts from the report which aired on ABC’s 20/20 March 13, 1998. In this first excerpt Ross interviews Allan Stayman, a Clinton administration official in the Department of the Interior, who was investigating labor conditions in Saipan. And Brian Ross also takes a worker in one of the factories and ends with Eric Gregoire, a human rights worker with the Department of the Interior. Most of the workers in these factories are from mainland China.

BRIAN ROSS: In fact, American authorities have discovered many Chinese workers are forced to sign secret agreements, known as shadow contracts, before they leave China, severely and, in some ways, illegally restricting their activities while on American soil. For example, in this agreement translated into English by American authorities, workers are forbidden to participate in any religious or political activity or to ask for a salary increase or even to fall in love or get married, much as might be the case in mainland China.
(snip/...)
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=06/01/04/1524256

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Sex, Greed And Forced Abortions
Rebecca Clarren
May 09, 2006


Rebecca Clarren, an investigative journalist based in Portland, Ore., traveled to Saipan in February on assignment for Ms.The article below is excerpted from an exclusive investigative report that appears in the Spring 2006 issue of Ms. magazine. To read the full article , look for Ms. on 7,757 newsstands across the country—or subscribe at www.msmagazine.com.

A naked Mongolian woman in a blond wig grinds her body around a silver pole. As music pounds through the small room, disco lights reveal an overweight, graying man in a Hawaiian shirt sitting in the corner, rubbing the thighs of another of the club’s dancers.

Outside this Saipan nightclub, scantily-clad Chinese girls, their hair dyed red or blond, sit on cheap white plastic chairs. “You want massage?” they call out to the Asian businessmen and U.S. Navy sailors who frequent the club.

“I can get you lots of Chinese girls,” says a man with one long fingernail, who calls himself Free. “You can take a girl back to her room and do whatever you want to her. All night.”

One would imagine that Tom DeLay, a right-wing Christian, would be appalled by the teeming red-light district of Saipan, the main island in the Micronesian chain of the Northern Marianas. Or Jack Abramoff, an Orthodox Jew. Yet these two men have been among the strongest supporters of an exploitative labor and immigration system on Saipan that has helped fuel not just this sex tourism, but work arrangements that are tantamount to indentured servitude.

When asked about reports of forced prostitution and labor abuses, DeLay told the Galveston County Daily News in May 2005: “Sure, when you get this number of people, there are stories of sexual exploitation. But in interviewing these employees one-on-one, there was no evidence of any of that going on. No evidence of sweatshops as portrayed by the national media. It’s a beautiful island with beautiful people who are happy about what’s happening.”
(snip/...)
http://www.tompaine.com/articles/2006/05/09/sex_greed_and_forced_abortions.php

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ThomCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-27-06 07:17 PM
Response to Original message
2. The only difference is political power.
x(
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PSPS Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-27-06 07:27 PM
Response to Original message
3. This must be what happens to you if bush doesn't get his vigorish.
After all, these islands are all about sweatshops, forced prostitution, and all the other hallmarks of "family values" republican-style. Why would they [pick this guy out of thousands just like him? I presume it's because he didn't cough up his "protection money" to the bush cabal.
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KamaAina Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-27-06 08:29 PM
Response to Original message
4. Why are we reading about this in an Aussie paper?
So far, nothing even in Hawai'i local media, which did cover the story when the creep was first brought here:

http://www.starbulletin.com/2001/03/28/news/story6.html

Tammy arrived in Tafuna, American Samoa, in August 1999 expecting to make $408 per month, according to their contracts. Minimum wage there is $2.60. Their employer was to provide lodging and meals free of charge.

Lee kept his workers indebted to him by charging $200 for room and board. And beginning in February 2000, meals cost $5 per day, Tammy said.

A few months before she arrived, the U.S. Department of Labor had fined Daewoosa for failing to pay its workers. But Lee continued to withhold wages and charge for meals and lodging, making the workers more indebted, according to the complaint.

At one time, a month's salary came out to only $3.37 after meal deductions.
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