Turkmenistan Cotton Harvest: New Harvest, Same Old Abuses

Article originally published by Anti-Slavery International, at https://www.antislavery.org/turkmenistan-cotton-harvest-new-harvest-same-old-abuses/

As the annual cotton harvest commences and Turkmenistan marks Independence Day on 27 September, business and human rights policy and research officer, Rocio Domingo Ramos, sheds light on the continued practice of forced labour in the country’s cotton industry.

Cotton cultivation is a labour-intensive and very physically demanding process. Workers must bend down and repeat the same movements over and over again, every working day. This is on top of carrying heavy cotton sacks (of 20 to 30 kilograms) for several hundred metres in either hot weather or a chilly, damp autumn.

Water is generally brought to the fields for workers, but it is untreated, unfiltered and may be contaminated. What’s more, cotton pickers may face health risks because chemicals are used intensively during harvests. Many cotton workers reportedly suffer from bronchitis and cystitis due to the working conditions. Workers do not have access to medical assistance and cannot afford medical care themselves due to their low income.

On top of the poor working conditions, in the 2020 harvest, many cotton workers allegedly received low wages or faced abusive behaviours from the tenant farmers who refused to pay their wages in full.

Several cotton pickers who had reportedly worked all day without any break received only half of their expected wage because the farmer decided to cut their wages as there was moisture in the cotton.

2020 cotton harvest

In addition to unsafe working conditions and pay cuts, the problem of child labour also remains.

Despite the official ban on involving children in the cotton harvest in Turkmenistan since 2005, some children reportedly continue to be subjected to child labour in the country’s cotton fields. These children are forced to pick cotton to help their parents who are threatened with losing their job if they do not contribute to the cotton harvest.

The combination of forced labour, low wages, poor working conditions, and child labour mean that we continue to call for a complete boycott of Turkmen cotton globally.

How you can help

It’s critical that we all work together to help end the practice of forced labour in the cotton industry in Turkmenistan.

Join us by taking a few quick, simple, and easy steps to help us put critical pressure on the Turkmen government. Joining forces with the business community, governments in other countries and international agencies will hopefully lead us to put an end to this practice.

Here’s how you can help:

Tweet to your favourite brand:

Tweet your favourite brands about your views on this issue. Here’s some sample text:

#ForcedLabour is rife in #Turkmenistan and affects global cotton supply chains. @ [brand handle] please sign up to the Turkmen Cotton Pledge to ensure it doesn’t taint the products I buy from you. https://www.sourcingnetwork.org/turkmen-cotton-pledge/

Email your favourite brand:

Write to businesses to ask them to sign the Turkmen Cotton Pledge. You can often find consumer contact details for your favourite brands on their website.

Share a link to this blog post, explaining why this issue matters to you, and ask the business to sign the Turkmen Cotton Pledge. If you receive a response, please drop Anti-Slavery International an email with a copy of their response.

Do also keep an eye on Turkmen.news and our Twitter page for more updates on the 2021 harvest.

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Uzbekistan Cotton Harvest 2020: Video Highlights