Adidas Group, Under Armour and VF Corp. are among seven leading apparel brands urging the Guatemalan government to resolve the long-pending DR-CAFTA labor complaint filed by six Guatemalan unions and the AFL-CIO four years ago.


In an April 30 letter to President Oscar Molina Perez, the companies stated that, “An attractive business climate for companies like ours includes not only economic and political stability, but also an environment in which the basic rights of workers are respected and labor laws are consistently enforced.”  The letter went on to specifically support the right of workers to organize unions.


The letter was signed American Eagle Outfitters, Inc., Adidas Group, Fair Labor Association, Gap, Inc., Liz Claiborne, Nike Inc., Under Armour, PVH Corp., and VF Corporation.  It was sent by the Fair Labor Association to the President and copied to the U.S. Ambassador, Guatemalan cabinet members, and Guatemalan business leaders. 


The Maquiladora Solidarity Network (MSN), which focuses on improving workers' rights to organize throughout Latin America, said it “warmly welcomes the letter of support for core worker rights and thanks each of the signers for sending a strong message to the Guatemalan government and business sector that failure to satisfactorily resolve the DR-CAFTA labour complaint is of serious concern to leading U.S. companies.”


MSN reports that violence against Guatemalan unions has escalated since the DR-CAFTA complaint was filed; seven members of the country's largest and most important union, Sitrabi, a filer of the complaint, have been murdered in the past year.


MSN and U.S. Labor Education in the Americas Project (USLEAP) worked closely with apparel brands to craft and send the letter.