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Taken from another list...
-- I lived on Saipan for 3 years. I SAW the factories... I SAW the labor camps where people were kept behind barbed wire and German Shepards... I KNEW people who ran these factories... I KNEW people who brought in girls from PI and China to work as sex slaves... this stuff IS happening... I saw it with my own eyes... under the banner of freedom... the flag of the United States of America. ***** http://galvestondailynews.com/story....9d24435d0c3d0e DeLay disputes charges of abuse in Saipan “Incredible lies” was the way House Majority Leader Tom DeLay described charges that some foreign workers on Saipan labored in sweatshops in the 1990s while others were forced into sex slavery. DeLay’s vehement denials come despite findings by two federal agencies and by congressmen from both parties that the charges were true. So why would a social conservative defend the goings-on in the garment factories, restaurants and bars of an island 12,000 miles away from his Texas district, which includes a large portion of Galveston County? The answer involves ideology, politics and money — and it could play an important role in determining DeLay’s future as the No. 2 man in the House. +++ DeLay has long fought against imposing immigration restrictions and the federal minimum wage on Saipan, part of a U.S. territory in the Pacific Ocean. Since 2001, a new governor and a lawsuit have brought changes to the island’s labor regulations, but in the 1990s, they were the subject of a heated debate in the Congress. Questions about labor conditions on Saipan have resurfaced in recent weeks as the national press has continued to look into DeLay’s travel and who financed it. Much of the coverage has focused on Jack Abramoff, a lobbyist who is now the target of a federal investigation into allegations that he defrauded Indian tribes pursuing casino licenses. Over the years, Abramoff has made millions by representing a variety of interests with business before the government. What he sells is his access to powerful politicians such as DeLay and members of the Bush administration. Abramoff also has employed former DeLay staffers and makes hefty political contributions both to the congressman and to the president. The Washington Post last month revealed that Abramoff charged parts of a two-week trip DeLay took to Britain in 2000 to his personal credit card. Then the New York Times last week revealed that Abramoff paid for two of DeLay’s senior aides — along with two Democratic members of Congress — to visit Saipan in 1996 and 1997. DeLay himself visited the tropical island for the New Year’s holiday in December 1997, but Saipan’s government paid for the trip. It is a violation of House ethics rules for a registered lobbyist such as Abramoff to pay for congressional travel, but DeLay said that he believed his and his staff’s trips were financed by nonprofit organizations and through other proper means. “The fact of the matter is that we complied with House rules both in spirit and intent every way that I know how,” DeLay said in an interview with The Daily News. He added that while the national media have focused on the golf he played in 2000 at St. Andrews in Scotland, they have ignored the real reasons for his travel. “They have refused to print the fact that I am involved in many, many different international issues, whether it be freedom in Taiwan or Israel or Russia or religious freedom and human rights in China, Southeast Asia and in Russia, and human trafficking and slavery and sexual exploitation in Southeast Asia,” DeLay said. +++ But was DeLay, then the House Republican whip, defending human rights on Saipan? Abramoff, to whom DeLay once referred as “one of my closest and dearest friends,” was employed from 1996 to 2000 by the government of the Commonweath of the Northern Marianas Islands. The commonwealth is a U.S. territory. Saipan is its capital. The territory hired Abramoff to lobby the federal government to fight proposals to impose federal immigration and minimum wage standards. Abramoff was also hired by the Saipan Garment Manufacturers Association, a trade group. The two paid Abramoff’s firm $4.5 million for his representation. Abramoff billed the territorial government more than $350,000 for travel expenses from scores of visits by congressmen in 1996 and 1997, including DeLay. Abramoff even billed the Northern Marianas, which was running huge budget deficits, for arranging congressional tee times at Saipan’s best golf courses, the Associated Press reported Tuesday. Under its 1986 charter, the territory had been allowed to create its own immigration and minimum wage regulations. The idea was to help the Marianas economy to develop by exempting it from the federal minimum wage. Allowing the territory to set its own immigration rules was supposed to help protect its cultural identity. Garment manufacturers, based primarily in China and Korea, found Saipan appealing. They were allowed to import an unlimited amount of textiles from overseas without paying the duties imposed on mainland garment manufacturers. The territory’s lax immigration rules allowed the companies to import workers from China, the Philippines, Sri Lanka and elsewhere in Asia. Its low minimum wage allowed them to pay $3.05 an hour. Despite using foreign workers and foreign cloth, the manufacturers could sew “Made in the USA” labels into the garments they made on Saipan. Meanwhile, mainland garment manufacturers complained that the lower-cost Saipan operations were driving them out of business. Manufacturers on Saipan made clothing for The Gap, Liz Claiborne, Banana Republic, Old Navy, J.C. Penney, Ralph Lauren, Abercrombie and Fitch, Brooks Brothers and others. As guest workers flooded Saipan, the territory’s population more than tripled between 1980 and 1995. DeLay said the special labor and immigration rules allowed by the territory’s 1986 charter were desperately needed. “The Marianas people were dependent on the federal government, and it destroyed them socially,” DeLay said. “They had huge rates of divorce, illegitimate births, drug use, alcoholism. It was a disaster. “The people decided to bring free enterprise and capitalism to the Marianas Islands and it all changed. People had jobs, they had dignity, families stayed together. Rates of drug use and alcoholism plummeted.” +++ However, after George Miller toured the island in 1998, he told a different story. Miller was the ranking Democrat on the House Committee on Resources, which has jurisdiction over insular territories such as the Northern Marianas, Samoa and the U.S. Virgin Islands. He said he interviewed workers from China, India, Bangladesh and elsewhere. Almost all told Miller they had paid recruiters in their home countries $2,000 to $7,000 for a chance at one- or two-year labor contracts in Saipan’s garment, restaurant and construction industries. Some in the garment industry lived in barracks with no running water and a hot plate for a kitchen, Miller reported. For those amenities, they paid their employers $100 a month in rent. One woman told Miller that when she became pregnant, her employer gave her a choice: return to China or be fired. The woman said she was afraid that if she went back to China, she’d be forced to have a late-term abortion. Other Chinese women told Miller that the “restaurant” jobs they’d taken consisted of hanging out in karaoke bars, being forced to have sex with the patrons and then being shut out of the proceeds from their prostitution, his report said. Meanwhile, the tidal wave of immigration brought with it spikes in gang and drug activity, Miller reported. DeLay said he’d heard the same allegations. “I wanted to see it for myself because of the kinds of charges (that have been made) — that I found to be totally false, incredible lies about the people of the Marianas Islands,” he said. “These were clean garment factories. They were bringing people from China and paying them in many cases more in one year than they could make in 10 years in China, thereby supporting families back in China.” The territorial government in the Marianas did a notoriously poor job of tracking how many guest workers were there in the 1990s and where they came from. Despite an official limit of 11,000 foreign workers in the garment industry, Miller in 1998 estimated that the actual number was closer to 28,000. He placed the overall number of foreign workers in the territory at 42,000 — more than the permanent population. “Sure, when you get this number of people, there are stories of sexual exploitation,” DeLay said. “But in interviewing these employees one-on-one, there was no evidence of any of that going on. No evidence of sweatshops as portrayed by the national media. It’s a beautiful island with beautiful people who are happy about what’s happening.” +++ |
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When I think "family values," the first person that comes to mind (after W, of course) is Tom DeLay. He is a morally bankrupt piece of sh**. I've seen photos of those factories and I would love to see DeLay sentenced to life in one of them.
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