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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
American Samoa: factory owner jailed for 40 years over human
trafficking
By John Braddock
16 July 2005
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In a case of what amounts to modern day slavery, a US federal
judge in Hawaii late last month sentenced Kil Soo Lee, the former
owner of a garment factory in American Samoa, to 40 years jail.
The court also ordered the South Korean businessman to pay $US1.8
million in restitution to about 300 immigrant workers, who were
lured to the South Pacific islands with the promise of three years
employment and wages of $US400 per month.
Originally charged in 2001, Lee was convicted in February 2003
of a number of federal criminal violations, including involuntary
servitude, extortion and money laundering. He owned the Daewoosa
garment factory, which operated in the US territory from 1998
to 2001 using immigrant workers recruited from China and Vietnam
and forced to labour in atrocious conditions.
The workers had paid fees ranging between $5,000 and $8,000
to secure employment at the Daewoosa factory. Lee controlled all
aspects of their daily life, including how much they ate. He punished
them when they complained about working conditions and threatened
them with arrest, beatings and deportation if they did not follow
orders. In 2002, two of Lees immediate accomplices, a manager
and a garment worker, pleaded guilty to trafficking charges and,
in 2004, were sentenced to 70 and 51 months jail respectively.
After Lee was sentenced last month, the US Justice Department
issued a statement boasting of its largest-ever human trafficking
prosecution. Since January 2001, the department has opened some
400 investigations and prosecuted 215 traffickerstriple
the number prosecuted over the prior four-year period. Justice
Department official Bradley Schlozman said the sentencing would
send a clear message to those who would attempt to profit
at the expense of anothers freedom.
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales seized the opportunity to
try to claim the moral high ground. Human trafficking is
a moral evil that is nothing less than modern-day slavery,
he declared, vowing to continue to pursue and prosecute
all those who attempt to profit from human suffering. Gonzales,
who was legal adviser to President Bush during his first term
of office, is notorious for justifying the incarceration without
trial of hundreds of so-called enemy combatants at Guantánamo
Bay and the torture of US prisoners in Afghanistan and Iraq.
The US media has been similarly self-congratulatory. The Honolulu
Star-Bulletin claimed that the judgement would give this years
July 4 celebrations special meaning for victims now
living in Hawaii. Some 200 of the former Daewoosa workers remain
in the US under special visas. They are, it is claimed, doing
really well (that is, in low paid jobs such as factory work,
waitressing, and the fast food and beautician industries) and
can offer their children freedom and happiness, assuming
that they are finally granted permanent residency.
The prosecution of this particularly horrendous case will not,
however, change the conditions that produced it. There is a constant
stream of people seeking to escape the appalling social conditions
in countries like China and Vietnam created by the predatory operations
of US and global capital. Lee is one of the few cases of an employer
who has been prosecuted for human trafficking. The
usual targets of Washingtons campaigns are tens of thousands
of so-called illegal immigrants, who are routinely vilified, persecuted,
arrested and deported, with the full backing of the US legal system.
Whether the sweatshop conditions happen to be in American Samoa,
Vietnam, China, Mexico or the US itself, no one holds to account
the major US corporations that are the principal beneficiaries.
In the wake of the Lee case, there has been no media criticism
of the American companies that bought cheap goods from Daewoosa.
Workers endured physical abuse, threats, lack of food and pay,
confinement, sexual harassment and unsanitary dormitory conditions
while making sports clothing, jackets, swimsuits and other items
for such well-known retail chains as Target and J.C. Penney.
These companies claim to have severed their ties with a New
York manufacturer and vendor who had contracted Daewoosa to make
the clothing. However, while it suited, US firms had shipped their
own materials directly to the factory in American Samoa and turned
a blind eye to the appalling conditions there. Neither the companies
nor the go-between has been subject to any legal action and can
move their operations to other agents and sources of cheap, exploited
labour, leaving Lee as the convenient scapegoat.
Belated action
Lees company was set up in American Samoa in 1998 with
the support of the US territorys lieutenant governor. Conditions
at the factory first became known to labour advocacy groups in
March 1999 after two of the garment workers, who spoke English,
scaled the factory compounds fence looking for help. The
two were also prominent in efforts to contact lawyers in 2000
over a civil suit for back pay. They later disappeared. Although
their bodies were never found, American Samoan police have classified
their disappearance as drowning accidentsa matter still
disputed by workers.
Factory guards were armed with plastic pipes and the compound
was surrounded with razor wire. One woman testified during a congressional
hearing that Lee would grope female workers and force them to
have sex with him. At times, the workers did 18-hour days, but
the pay was only sporadic. Lee threatened workers with penalties
if they did not work hard enough. If the workers broke their contracts,
or if they were deported or wanted to leave voluntarily, they
were penalised by as much as $5,000. In November 2000, during
a confrontation at the factory, guards and workers clashed. A
female seamstress lost her eye and a male worker had his eardrum
shattered.
Lee charged the workers $200 per month for lodging and food.
In Vietnam, they had been told both would be provided free. Workers
were ill-fed and malnourished, to the extent that some seamstresses
stopped having menstrual cycles. In some cases, troublemakers
were not allowed to eat. One Labor Department official described
the workers as walking skeletons. Another federal
inspector told the women hed seen better conditions in camps
for war refugeesthe average weight of workers when they
left the factory was 76 pounds (34.5 kilograms). Some dormitories
lacked running water and reeked of human waste and body odour.
A curfew was enforced and often when workers were returning to
their lodgings after a shift, guards searched their bags or slapped
them for being late.
The first official intervention only came in May 1999, when
the Department of Labor started ordering Lee to pay back wages
to his employees and levied fines. Occupational Safety and Health
officials conducted at least three investigations in 1999, 2000
and 2001 and cited numerous violations including for substandard
housing and diet, sanitation, safety, workplace violence
and overcrowding.
In October 2000, the Trafficking Victims Protection Act became
law giving the Justice Department the authority to specifically
go after human traffickers. But it was only after the case was
publicised by lawyers, Vietnamese community activitists in the
US, and various human rights groups, that the FBI began to investigate
in February 2001. By then, the factory was already in terminal
decline. Lee was not finally convicted until two years later with
the victims still owed millions of dollars.
According to the Seattle Post, which ran a special investigation
on the case in 2003, some of the ex-Daewoosa employees resident
in the city remain concerned about the 90 workers who were sent
back to Vietnam. Many have lost their homes to loan sharks who
lent them money at high interest rates to go abroad and are still
being harassed for money owed. Most, including those who now live
in the US, have not received back pay and damages. A court on
American Samoa has ruled that Lee, who is now claiming bankruptcy,
owes them some $3.5 million.
The Seattle Post has focussed attention on Vietnams
communist leaders and the operation of state-owned
labour export companies that organised the Vietnamese workers
at Daewoosa. A US-based Vietnamese social service agency is pushing
for the government to pay restitution. A spokesman called on US
lawmakers and businesspeople to block Vietnams
attempts to join the WTO until it does so.
The Stalinist regime, which is opening up Vietnam to global
capital, should be held accountable for human trafficking,
along with its other crimes. But attention should not be deflected
from some of the chief culpritsthe very US lawmakers and
businesspeople and their free market policies that have created
such a social disaster for workers in Asia, the Pacific Islands
and in the US itself.
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