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Woe Christmas Tree: Wal-Mart Buys Ornaments From a Chinese Sweatshop

News: Just in time for the holidays, teenage whistleblowers expose the factory where kids make tree-trimmings on the cheap.

December 14, 2007


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Six months ago, they were just kids hoping to make some extra dough at a summer job. Now this group of fearless Chinese high school students finds itself up against the largest retailer in the world—Wal-Mart. With the help of the National Labor Committee—the American outfit famed for shaming Kathy Lee Gifford for her line's exploitative labor practices—the teenagers have brought to light yet another scandal with big implications. Turns out the Guangzhou Huanya ornaments factory in Guangdong, where the high school students worked, employs children as young as 12, who are forced to work 15 hour days, 7 days a week to make Wal-Mart's Christmas ornaments in time for the holiday season. It might come as no surprise that the wages paid by the big box behemoth's manufacturers are paltry, but these kids earn only half of China's minimum wage—just 26 cents an hour.

Last July, the high school students decided to take matters into their own hands: They documented the conditions by smuggling cell phones into the factory, went on strike, and filed a complaint with the local labor bureau—and the NLC—regarding the working conditions. As if the long hours and pitiful paychecks weren't bad enough, workers at the factory have been exposed to dangerous chemicals that cause skin rashes and sores. But the management of the factory doesn't pay for medical bills or allow sick days and docks workers who quit unexpectedly an entire month's pay.

"These kids are the protagonists in this story," said Barbara Briggs of the NLC. "They had the nerve and guts to bring cell phones in to take pictures. They went to bat for the 12 year olds." Briggs emphasizes the fact that when it comes to Wal-Mart's labor policies, Guangzhou Huanya factory is not the exception. "This case makes it clear that hiring young workers is an institutionalized practice," she said when we spoke today after the release of the group's investigative report. "This is the way Wal-Mart is doing business. It's not an anomaly, and this factory isn't just a hole in the wall."

Indeed, the Guangzhou Huanya factory in Guangdong employs 8,000 workers and is among the top three Christmas ornament makers in mainland China, supplying Target and other retailers as well. The new NLC report finds that each worker at the factory is expected to pump out tens of thousands of ornaments a day, hand painting one every 39 seconds, or spray painting, without gloves or masks, between 64,000 and 76,800 hanging decorations each shift.

Wal-Mart says it's investigating the situation, but has given no indication of a timeframe for action. The retail giant didn't bother to comment on its website about the young workers' plight. Instead, the site boasts a story casting the store in a more favorable light: "Local Kids Get a Wal-Mart Shopping Spree."

Reports of dangerous working conditions and labor abuses in China are not new. The country, long condemned for its human rights abuses, has become the world's most prolific manufacturer in the last quarter century. And with all the news about hazardous toys made in China, it's not surprising that some Washington ears perk up when issues concerning Chinese-made goods are at hand. Yesterday Senator Byron Dorgan (D-ND) issued a statement condemning Wal-Mart’s practices. "Chinese sweatshops now produce not only the toys under our Christmas trees, but even the ornaments that hang on those trees," the statement reads. "It is completely against the spirit of Christmas to produce ornaments in sweatshop factories where the workers are physically abused and financially cheated. We need to get serious about keeping the products of foreign sweatshops off American shelves. And we shouldn’t wait until next year’s holiday season rolls around before we take action."

Celia Perry is an assistant editor at Mother Jones.



 

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Just like Santa's dark little workshop at Buchenwald, where tailors, musicians, sex workers, and actors provided amusement for the Herrenvolk.
Posted by:GerhardtDecember 14, 2007 11:35:45 AMRespond ^
One wonders how it is possible that our political and corporate, uh, "leaders" -- who enable and encourage and implement these sad arrangements -- somehow reckon that the truth won't catch up with them? I mean, the truth is almost always revealed eventually. Oh, yeah, I forgot. Maybe they don't care and figure that the rest of us won't care either -- after all these goods are almost like free -- and that somehow they will be able to get away with their crimes. Hey, if it works, why not...?
Posted by:Kurk MulliganDecember 14, 2007 12:30:55 PMRespond ^
This is disgusting and although I do not shop at WalMart for good reason I will be writing them directly and also letting everyone I know what is going on and the abuses that these kids endure so we can buy cheap crap. I think Mother Jones should start an International Boycott of WalMart
Posted by:Renate Van DorsserDecember 14, 2007 1:42:19 PMRespond ^
It's all about supply and demand. They are producing cheap junk 24/7 at the cost of their health and education to supply the western world with doodads. Mass consumption began in America and is swiftly moving to Europe. Even at the Christmas markets of Basel, Switzerland you can find cheap Asian, mass-produced kitsch. We need to start making our own ornaments again! Much more creative!
Posted by:alexafdDecember 14, 2007 2:22:02 PMRespond ^
Always low wages, always. It doesn't matter, Chinese or American the Walton family takes billions for themselves and leaves the crumbs for the people actually making them their money. The solution,organize. Don't shop at these stores and don't buy Chinese products. They're killing us and the people making these products. I quit shopping at Wal Mart long ago and wasn't ever a big spender there. The same goes for Target,Kmart,Sears and any place else that sells sweatshop products.
Posted by:Douglas ODecember 14, 2007 3:17:18 PMRespond ^
I posted some thoughts here: http://blog.ryanmickle.com/index.ph p/2007/12/14/consumerism-and-the-holidays/ Hope you enjoy...
Posted by:Ryan MickleDecember 14, 2007 4:05:58 PMRespond ^
Thank you for this story. It truly is outrageous that this is not headline news. It sickens me to know due to pricing, people who know better still continue to buy Chinese made goods. I wonder if the US stopped all trade with China, yes ALL trade, this would change things for the workers?
Posted by:Gramma KittyDecember 14, 2007 4:51:03 PMRespond ^
"Local Kids Get a Wal-Mart Shopping Spree." They probably funded the shopping spree from the $470,000.00 that they got by *suing the former employee who was brain damaged so severely in an accident she has to live in a nursing home. They sued because her Wal-mart medical insurance paid for her initial medical expenses and they wanted the money back. * as reported in the WSJ
Posted by:Frustrated FarmerDecember 14, 2007 6:15:17 PMRespond ^
Wow. High school students have more courage and morals than our politicians. That's both inspiring and depressing.
Posted by:ColleenDecember 14, 2007 8:37:19 PMRespond ^
Amen to that! Down with dirty wally world!
Posted by:NancyDecember 14, 2007 8:51:26 PMRespond ^
In the late 1800's in the good old USA that is the reason brave men and women fought for unions - the same thing was happening here. What can we do about it?
Posted by:Bernadette FitzpatrickDecember 14, 2007 10:24:29 PMRespond ^
I have never spent any money in WALMART. I never will. Stories such as this only show them for what they are, Greedy, Old, Pirate scum.
Posted by:KhronosDecember 14, 2007 11:01:40 PMRespond ^
Those kids have more courage and foresight than I would have had at their age. I am glad for them but am concerned for their safety and future in the Chinese (basically multi/transnational corporate) labor market as a result.
Posted by:MarkDecember 15, 2007 12:03:34 AMRespond ^
And this infdormation surprises ? A boycott of ALL chinese made goods is our only response !
Posted by:Don SchneiderDecember 15, 2007 5:11:12 AMRespond ^
hmm...so we should "get serious about keeping the products of foreign sweatshops off American shelves," but it's ok to keep products made by domestic sweatshops on our shelves? have we forgotten Los Angeles & US Territories, among others?
Posted by:mollyDecember 15, 2007 8:26:47 AMRespond ^
Why is everyone so shocked??? the West has been exploiting the Orient(and every other country it can) for the last 300 years.What about checking out the plight of every nation that's been used to give Westerners their 'comfortable' life???
Posted by:班迈克December 15, 2007 9:19:33 AMRespond ^
Yeah, but look around at America - the Chinese seem to love us or something. For crying out loud, Easter, Valentines Day, Lent etc ad nauseum, were NOTHING holidays. No decorations, no real gifts or anything. Until the Chinese started making 'em Fear not China making everything. Be afraid of when they stop.
Posted by:Mike 0December 15, 2007 3:49:48 PMRespond ^
Is it like the death penalty, only slower? Nice people these Chinese businessmen. And we're all going to celebrate at the Beijing Olympics! Isn't that great? Why not institute an Olympics boycott? Against the death penalty, the sweatshops etc?
Posted by:Pierre PicardDecember 16, 2007 7:04:37 AMRespond ^
Before I buy something I look at the label to see where it is made. To my dismay the majority of items are made in China. This includes the pricey designer labels that we love so much. WalMart may only be one in many that contribute to the sweatshops in China. America has done this to ourselves, we are own worst enemy.
Posted by:Samm RomeroDecember 16, 2007 9:39:57 AMRespond ^
Every time the corporations want something bad enough they buy it. They bought the 200 election and the 2004 election. And Wallyworld gets a win every time. It must stop.
Posted by:TheDirtyDemocratDecember 16, 2007 4:16:35 PMRespond ^
Who cares? Christmas in America is just another of their many orgies of gluttony and greed. Americans love to watch others suffer to support their incessant consumption. Their widespread support of the troops in Iraq speaks to this. Americans love cheap energy and a "little" killing is just fine with them.
Posted by:Underground PirateDecember 16, 2007 7:54:08 PMRespond ^
Neither my husband nor I will shop at Wal-Mart. We encourage all our relatives to do exactly the same. However, many of our relatives and friends want to buy more and more for less and less and then don't care what kind of conditions people must endure to supply their need for excess. American people are a sorry group right now. All we want is more and more junk for the cheapest price possible. We really need to take a good look at ourselves.
Posted by:Owl 16December 17, 2007 12:48:54 PMRespond ^
Neither my husband nor I will shop at Wal-Mart. We encourage all our relatives to do exactly the same. However, many of our relatives and friends want to buy more and more for less and less and then don't care what kind of conditions people must endure to supply their need for excess. American people are a sorry group right now. All we want is more and more junk for the cheapest price possible. We really need to take a good look at ourselves.
Posted by:Owl 16December 17, 2007 12:49:03 PMRespond ^
I hope all do as I have been doing. That is, if it doesnt say Made in the U.S.A. dont buy it.
Posted by:Mark LeslieDecember 17, 2007 4:48:30 PMRespond ^
Hey, American consumers, C H O I C E is a word, here. There's a big divide, no doubt, between stupid and wise spending; tell that to the politicians and the king-makers, right. Why do so many of us Americans feel the need to display so elaborately ? Isn't this never- satisfied neediness (could that be the meaning of "lust" ?!)just what some conspiracy theorists have warned against, and what profiteers and power-mongers have ordered (after all, those two go hand-in-hand, writing prescriptions and reaping . . .) ? Ever read about what's purported to be behind Kubrick's last stand, the film "Eyes Wide Shut" ?! A little morsel of truth, maybe, if you apply quasi-wacko theory to our cultural production of Barbies (literally and metaphorically) and Barbie-Disney-pop/schlop-singing- idol-inundated daughters (not to mention, all the rest of consumerama brain-washing, "free market" cultural indoctrination, including every-day female TV characters rampantly portrayed as being beings who are fantastically motivated by shopping. Ugh.). And, what's that new little documovie, about American consumerism, the Church of Stop Shopping, or something like that ?! Ha. What's "lifestyle," without "style" ? Just "life": love it, sweeties, without plying a grossly envious need to possess and profess everything in your pathway; the Joneses and their so-called social - sociopolitico - superiors may be the excess eventually excised. Or, not; then, what ? Make choices, take a stand or several, now.
Posted by:ElspathanneDecember 18, 2007 4:52:04 AMRespond ^
What a surprise. Golly gee how long ago was when we found Nike doing the same thing with indonesian sweated labour? Every good American Corporation, those good ol' nation builders still have their HQ's here and their manufacturing offshore in non union pennies an hour countries all in the goal of making us global. Not one administartion or Congress has done anything to impede this sale of our capital, in fact they have made it possible. The shrub is building that bigtime fence along the Mexican border and i bet much of the material for it was made offshore. Don't buy at Walmart don't buy anything made offshore. That requires some discipline and backbone.
Posted by:DefoeDecember 18, 2007 9:24:31 AMRespond ^
Wal-Mart makes their $$ off the uneducated who don't make a lot of money. These people make up 80% or more of our country. They aren't going to see this story, and wouldn't believe it anyway. And if they did see and believe, they'd still go to Wal-Mart...they can't afford different, and can't get a job, since they aren't a 12 year old Chinese who accepts .15C/hr. Their biggest concern is that Iraqi soldiers or immigrants are going to bust in their door any second, since that's what their told by the media. It's broken, and the downhill ride is just starting. I say SHOP at Wal-Mart if you want to accelerate the process!
Posted by:JustinDecember 18, 2007 10:24:36 AMRespond ^
This is how it's done in Fascist America, making money off of child-slave-labor. We are all criminals to allow this. Happy holidays. ___________________________________ ___________________________________________ "To accept passively an unjust system is to cooperate with that system; thereby the oppressed become as evil as the oppressor." -Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Posted by:David KaczmarekDecember 19, 2007 5:52:42 PMRespond ^
It's a national shame for America, and this of course, includes me. I hold stock and purchase stock as gifts for my grandchildren. I won't be doing that again, anytime soon. Things should change, and must change with Wal-Mart. I truly believe many Americans, for the most part, had no idea Wal-Mart has been using little children as slaves. SHAME ON WAL-MART. Shirley A. Davis
Posted by:Shirley A. DavisDecember 19, 2007 7:14:59 PMRespond ^
Why do most people and even some commenters here assume that this is a Wal-Mart issue? This problem goes far beyond Wal-Mart. To all the posters that say "Don't shop at Wal-mart"...well have a look at all the other products you consume and retailers you buy from. You really think Wal-Mart is the only company doing this? Wal-Mart is simply a proxy that is enjoying the spoils of slave labor the Chinese gov't allows. Stop the source, put pressure on China...oh wait, we can't China owns us. Quit spending, start saving and invest back into yourself if you want to make a difference.
Posted by:Steve-ODecember 21, 2007 11:14:38 AMRespond ^
This can be stopped very very quickly on the consumer level. Don't buy it. The Chinese are historically disinterested in the rights of people -- there are too many there for that to matter -- and their socialism is desperately materialistic, and not in the Marxist sense. Our empty-headed piggish acquistiveness (which they passionately condemn) is the rationale for their use of our economy to build theirs. Stop buying stuff made there.
Posted by:Geng Ma SaDecember 21, 2007 5:07:51 PMRespond ^
Beast Wally strikes again! There's a simple old saying that covers WM like no other..."if they will steal from you, they will steal from me". You have to know that if they will "steal" from the lives and well being of children they will do the same from their customers. There is one thing in this article I have to question. The statement about each worker being required to produce tens of thousands of hand painted ornaments per shift or to spray paint up to 76,800 ornaments per shift. ?????? Doesn't author have a calculator? The numbers reported are impossible...even under intense pressure from Beast Wally.
Posted by:jd penningtonDecember 24, 2007 3:19:29 AMRespond ^
When will people wake up and quit buying from greedy monsters like Walmart?
Posted by:PattiDecember 29, 2007 12:53:26 AMRespond ^
What's real big is the fact if they don't do the work, they don't eat. By the time it's gets down to really making it, there's no money for the people at the bottom and that's why they stay at the bottom.
Posted by:Polly KansasDecember 30, 2007 10:10:52 AMRespond ^
all this talk about the chinese is making me hungry. i think i'll have egg fu yung tonight.
Posted by:joeJanuary 1, 2008 12:30:51 PMRespond ^
Americans want it cheap regardless of the consequences. Until this changes, nothing will.
Posted by:JAMPIXJanuary 1, 2008 7:07:20 PMRespond ^
Good. Keeping the people of the world employed is the American way.
Posted by:Ames TiedemanJanuary 2, 2008 6:13:40 PMRespond ^
One thing Americans can do, on an individual level, is to keep your dollars out of the coffers of corporate america and at the same time, support the little local guy. I plan my purchases with a specific eye to this end. By planning ahead and getting to know your local community, you can totally eliminate any spending at the big box stores. I'll go to the local hardware store aa opposed to lowes or home depot, where I know the people who work there and get outstanding service and a very competitive price. Auto parts is the same. No autozone for me (not a real parts store). I have my business and school printing done by a shop that has been in town for years, not staples. Chain restaurants...forget it !!!!! Just remember this...corporate america can be blamed for many of our nation's woes. The shrinking middle class, working on Sundays(unoins aren't perfect either, but at least they gave us the weekend), inadequate wages and little or no benefits are just a few examples. When the little local guy has to close his doors forever, he will not be replaced by another little local guy, rather by another target or best buy(worst service). In closing, we must learn the corporate america is NOT your friend. We must govern ourselves accordingly.
Posted by:PeterJanuary 4, 2008 5:14:47 AMRespond ^
If those Walmart shopping addicts only knew that all those "low prices" come with a tremendous cost - child slave labor!
Posted by:TruthsearchFebruary 1, 2008 1:13:47 PMRespond ^
god bless america. child labor benefits us all. i love paying very little for goods and everyday items. and these slave children get to learn to value of work and the all mighty dollar.
Posted by:joeFebruary 27, 2008 7:39:51 AMRespond ^
I dont know maybe its just me, but if you ask me, I'd say that kid in the picture looks pretty happy.
Posted by:glennMarch 16, 2008 1:47:52 PMRespond ^

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