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Ramatex Demands Namibia Take Over PlantWINDHOEK, 15 May (IRIN) - Malaysian company Ramatex has told the Namibian government to either take over the local company or it will be shut down, leading to the retrenchment of some 5,000 textile workers. According to the local English daily, The Namibian, Ramatex boss Albert Lim arrived last week from Singapore to inform the Cabinet that only two options were left: either buy the Namibian company or he would close it down. "The deadline is set for next Monday, 22 May," an official of the National Union of Namibian Workers (NUNW), told IRIN. "Ramatex said it wanted N$490 million (US$82 million) for the factory and its equipment. If the government does not agree, all workers would be laid off, and the machinery and equipment would be dismantled and shipped out." Ramatex Tight Lipped David Yongh, Ramatex's manager in Namibia, was tight-lipped about the ultimatum. "I have no comment to make on that topic," he told IRIN on Monday. In an effort to rescue Namibia's already troubled textile industry, a technical team has been set up under the leadership of Prime Minister Nahas Angula. All stakeholders, including the labour union representatives, are being consulted. "They are in a meeting right now and an announcement will be made when a solution is reached, said Penda Namuhuja, special assistant to the Prime Minister. Plant Opened in 2002 Ramatex set up shop in Namibia in 2002 to produce fabrics for the US market under the Africa Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), which gave apparel manufactured in African countries preferential access to the US market. The company invested about US$150 million in a manufacturing plant on the western outskirts of Windhoek, the capital, and the municipality provided around $20 million in necessary infrastructure. Complaints about poor wages, unfair labour conditions and dismissals have dogged Ramatex from the start. There were also environmental concerns about groundwater pollution by toxins resulting from the fabric-dyeing process, in contravention of specific instructions laid down by the Windhoek municipality. According to Kiros Sackarias, acting secretary-general of the Namibian Food and Allied Workers Union (Nafau), workers earned "peanuts" at Ramatex. "The average salary is about N$400 (US$67) to N$500 (US$83) since Ramatex opened doors, and no increases were made," he told IRIN. A year ago 1,600 workers received retrenchment packages after another Malaysian garment company, Rhino Garments, a subsidiary of Ramatex Textiles Namibia, closed its doors when workers protested.
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