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Author Minnie Driver   ( Replies 2 | Views 595 )
Go top 20/11/2003 @ 13:56 Go bottom
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Offline Anonymous
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Personne n'a de nouvelles de la boutique que l'actrice Hollywodienne à ouverte au Cambodge ?
#1825
Go top 20/11/2003 @ 20:29 Go bottom
RE : Minnie Driver Reply With Quote
Offline Rotha
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Tu peux être un peu plus claire l'anonyme ?

#1845 View Rotha's ProfileView All Posts by RothaU2U Member
Go top 21/11/2003 @ 22:41 Go bottom
RE : Minnie Driver Reply With Quote
Offline dsockz
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je pense que l'anonyme parle du projet de Minie Driver (actrice d'origine anglaise qui a fait qqs films a hollywood comme "Good Will Hunting") d'aller au cambodge dans une usine de confection de vetements pour faire un documentaire sur les conditions de travail...

Voir article en anglais: http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_833086.html


Minnie Driver to give up Hollywood for Cambodian sweat shop

Minnie Driver is putting her Hollywood career on hold to work in a sweatshop in Cambodia.

She will leave behind her tennis star boyfriend, Robby Ginepri, and her Notting Hill flat to experience poverty in South-East Asia.

The actress wants to highlight how Western clothing companies use "slave labour" in Third World countries by working for "weeks, perhaps months" alongside teenagers in Phnom Penh.

Driver, 32, currently filming the movie version of Phantom Of The Opera, told the Evening Standard she will use her fame to raise awareness of unfair global trade agreements.

She said: "I hope to make a documentary or at least write a book - with the help of a photographer friend of mine from the Washington Post - about working in a sweatshop in Cambodia.

"I will be working alongside other young women for as long as it takes for me to raise awareness of the fair trade issue.

"We in Britain and the Western world fuel the problem every time we buy clothes from any one of the major manufacturers which make goods in the Third World using cheap labour.

"I hope doing this will help raise standards, pay and conditions of employment in developing countries. Western companies should be paying a lot more to the workers in these sweatshops for the jobs they do. The inequality is shocking."


Story filed: 11:03 Tuesday 28th October 2003



... mais apparement il y a eu une reponse du gouvernement cambodgien (Cham Prasidh, Ministre du Commerce) qui disait que ca n'est pas la meilleure methode... [tiens, le gouvernement commente encore sur les discours d'actrices... esperons cette fois ci que ca n'aura pas les consequences qu'il y a eu pour l'ambassade de Thailande!).

Voir article en anglais http://film.guardian.co.uk/news/story/0,12589,1079566,00.html


Cambodia warns off Minnie Driver

John Aglionby, South-east Asia correspondent
Friday November 7, 2003
The Guardian

Cambodia has condemned plans by the British actor Minnie Driver to highlight sweatshop labour conditions by working in one of the country's textile factories.

The commerce minister, Cham Prasidh, said Driver's action could backfire, according to yesterday's Cambodia Daily newspaper. "Ms Minnie Driver can be harmful to Cambodia," he said.

"People who want to improve the working conditions of women in the garment industry in Cambodia should ... reflect on ways and means to assist them - and they should refrain from pursuing their anti-globalisation goals by trying to harm the poor in the world's poorest countries," Mr Prasidh said.

More than 200,000 people, mostly women aged 18-25, work in some 220 factories across Cambodia producing clothes for well-known western brands. Starting wages average less than £1 a day.

It is not known when Driver, 32, who was Oscar-nominated as best supporting actress in Good Will Hunting, is intending to arrive in Cambodia. Her visit is being organised as part of Oxfam's Make Trade Fair campaign.

Oxfam said it did not believe that her trip would be harmful to Cambodia. "Oxfam is not anti-globalisation," it added.

The issue of sweatshop labour is sensitive in Cambodia. The textile and clothing industries are the country's main source of foreign exchange, accounting for well over £600m - 36% of the gross domestic product.

The UN International Labour Organisation says that factory conditions in Cambodia, which have been appalling, are starting to improve.

In its latest survey, of 61 factories, it found no evidence of forced or child labour or discrimination. It did say, though, that workers were often not paid their full salaries, and overtime was often compulsory.

Cambodia joined the World Trade Organisation earlier this year, but it is not yet clear what effect this will have on factory workers.

"What Ms Driver will find is what everyone can see already through our reports," the ILO's representative in Cambodia, Lejo Sibbel, told the Cambodia Daily. "Problems exist, but the situation is improving."



Pour l'instant, no news... de Minnie Driver! (pendant ce temps Mickey de Disney a fete es 75 ans!)
#1895 View dsockz's ProfileView All Posts by dsockzU2U Member
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