REPUBLIC OF INDONESIA: Palm oil workers must get justice

  1. ホーム
  2. News Release
  3. International Secretariat
  4. REPUBLIC OF INDONESIA: Palm oil workers must get justice
11 May 2017
[International Secretariat]
Region: REPUBLIC OF INDONESIA
Topic: Business and Human Rights

Amnesty International calls on the Indonesian government to fulfil its commitment to establish a Task Force to investigate abuses against workers in the country’s vast palm-oil industry.

An Amnesty International report revealed labour exploitation on Indonesian plantations owned by suppliers and subsidiaries of Wilmar International, the world’s largest palm oil trader.

The abuses documented included women forced to work long hours under threat of having their already meagre pay cut, children as young as eight doing hazardous and hard physical work, workers suffering injuries from toxic chemicals used in plantations, and workers enduring long days to try to meet extremely high targets.

Four months have passed, but no action has been taken. The Indonesian government should immediately establish a task force to look into the abuses suffered by workers on palm oil plantations.

“Palm oil is important to Indonesia’s economy and the workers who depend on the industry for their survival. When businesses fail to comply with international human rights standards, they pose a threat to the country’s image and its economic ambitions.”

Amnesty International has received alarming reports that Wilmar has used intimidation tactics against workers and trade union members in an attempt to get them to deny the organization’s findings.

While the Indonesian government has announced that it will set up a task force, it has failed to say who will head it, how it will function, and what will come of it.

“The Ministry of Manpower should make details of the taskforce public. No effective investigation into these abuses can emerge from an opaque process,” said Josef Benedict.

“Transparency is needed across the board, including greater numbers of inspectors to monitor breaches of labour laws and ensuring that information about inspections, investigations, prosecutions, convictions and other penalties imposed is publicly available.”

Amnesty International is also calling on the EU-based countries to make sure that domiciled companies are meeting international standards when it comes to their purchasing practices.

Ahead of the meeting between Council of Palm Oil Producing Countries and theirs this month the human rights organization is calling on the EU to ensure that imported palm oil is not linked to labour exploitation.

“Responsibility for ending labour abuses lies with everyone involved in the palm oil trade, where it is Wilmar International or the companies that buy from it. Human rights abuses cannot be ignored just because there is an intermediary involved,”said Josef Benedict.

1 May 2017
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL PRESS RELEASE

Related Actions

Related Newses