Forced labour: despite efforts, the electronics sector is still the underperformer

139 graves and abandoned camps, which are thought to have housed hundreds of people, have been discovered. At the end of May, Malaysia was once again faced with a truth which has eaten away at the country for many years: migrant trafficking, which often leads to forced labour. Malaysia is not, however, the only one; this is also an issue in China, Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, as well as Singapore and Taiwan. Many Asian countries are affected by this abuse, which comes in various forms. The electronics sector, expanding greatly thanks to the boom of smartphones, tablets and other gadgets, has become one of the sectors most at risk when it comes to human rights in the workplace.

Through . Published on 29 June 2015 Ă  16h19 - Update on 29 June 2015 Ă  16h19

In 2013, the International Labour Organisation estimated that across the globe almost 21 million people were victims of forced labour. In Malaysia, almost one third of the 350,000 employees in the electronics sector are thought to be working in conditions comparable to slavery, according to a shock study published in 2014 by the NGO Vérité*.

Exploitation spreads. “We have led a lot of campaigns about this, also with big companies that are concerned, but there are still a lot of problems because the electronic industry has grown hugely”, confirms Pauline Overeem, international coordinator of the GoodElectronics network, which has been fighting since 2006 for the respect of human rights in this sector. She adds that “the situation will get worse because more and more goods are coming from the electronics industry now and because the exploitation of people is spreading from one country to another. Forced labour can also take really different forms.…

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