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Dear TPIA Member,

We write to you today to express deep concern with recent actions by a fellow member of the Thai Pineapple Industry Association (TPIA), Natural Fruit Co. Ltd., and Natural Fruit’s CEO and TPIA President, Wirat Piyapornpaiboon. The case Natural Fruit has brought against labor rights researcher, Mr. Andy Hall, has received international media attention and has been described as an “international embarrassment” to Thailand. Natural Fruit’s apparent effort to silence human rights defenders tarnishes the reputation of the TPIA and the entire Thai pineapple export industry. We ask that you take immediate action within the TPIA to urge that Natural Fruit drop its case against Andy Hall and cooperate with worker groups and NGOs to resolve alleged labor rights violations at its factories. If Natural Fruit continues on its current course, TPIA members should act together to preserve the integrity of the organization by sanctioning Natural Fruit, up to and including removal of Mr. Wirat Piyapornpaiboon as TPIA president and revocation of Natural Fruit’s membership in TPIA.

Natural Fruit filed its first criminal defamation charge against Mr. Hall on February 4, 2013, after he contributed to a report by the Finnish NGO Finnwatch that alleged serious labor rights abuses at the company’s factory in Prachuap Khiri Khan province. The report, Cheap has a High Price, gathered worker interviews to document violations including child labor, underpayment of wages, confiscation of migrant workers’ travel and work documents, and failure to provide legally mandated paid sick days, holidays and leave. Natural Fruit has continued to file cases against Mr. Hall, now totaling three criminal defamation charges, one civil defamation action and two criminal charges under the Computer Crimes Act. If found guilty of all the charges, Mr. Hall faces up to seven years in prison on each count and about $9.5 million in damages. The trial is scheduled to begin in September 2014.

Both before and after publication, Finnwatch and Mr. Hall made overtures to Natural Fruit to request comments and work together to resolve the issues alleged in the report. If, as Natural Fruit claims, the allegations are false, it should be straightforward for the company to clear up any issue and demonstrate that it is adhering to labor laws. By refusing to work with civil society and instead launching an aggressive legal battle against Mr. Hall, Natural Fruit is sending a message that it would rather intimidate critics and silence those who advocate on behalf of migrant workers than engage in genuine dialogue about conditions in its factories.

We would hope instead that Natural Fruit would pursue the matter in accordance with the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, which calls upon businesses to “address adverse human rights impacts with which they are involved” as a foundational principle.

TPIA should not remain silent while its President’s company undertakes punitive, unjust actions against Andy Hall. Already, internet searches for the Thai Pineapple Industry Association bring more results condemning Natural Fruit for its actions than positive stories of your work promoting the Thai pineapple industry. This negative publicity hinders TPIA’s ability to carry out its stated mission, and the trial has not yet even begun. Once the trial has begun, current and potential buyers may weigh the risks of becoming associated with the case and its connection with the TPIA and its member companies.

To protect its members and the industry it represents, we believe that TPIA must take immediate action. We hope that you will work with other members of the TPIA to encourage Natural Fruit to drop the charges against Mr. Hall and engage constructively with civil society to demonstrate that all its members are in compliance with labor laws. If Natural Fruit refuses, we ask that the TPIA revoke Natural Fruit’s membership and remove Mr. Piyapornpaiboon as TPIA president.

We hope you will give immediate attention to this issue and look forward to a response outlining your plans regarding Natural Fruit. We would also welcome the opportunity to discuss this matter with you further. Please forward any action you take on this matter to Bobbie Sta. Maria, stamaria@business-humanrights.org, at Business & Human Rights Resource Centre (BHR), or Abby McGill, abby@ilrf.org, at the International Labor Rights Forum. We will keep track of actions taken by TPIA members, information that may be registered in relevant sections of our websites and will be circulated to the 18,000 subscribers of BHR’s Weekly Update newsletter. We are also actively reaching out to retailers in the United States and Europe on this issue, and will convey to them our views on which members of the TPIA are taking this attack on human rights seriously.

Sincerely,

International Organizations

1. Asia Pacific Mission for Migrants (APMM)

2. Building and Wood Workers’ International

3. Burma Partnership

4. Business and Human Rights Resource Centre

5. European Coalition for Corporate Justice (ECCJ)

6. Fortify Rights

7. Global Migration Policy Associates

8. Human Rights Watch

9. International Centre for Trade Union Rights

10. International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC)

11. International Transport Workers Federation (ITF)

12. The International Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco and Allied Workers' Associations (IUF)

13. Migrant Forum in Asia

14. Migrant Rights International

15. Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders, a joint programme of FIDH (the International Federation for Human Rights) and the World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT)

16. South East Asia Committee for Advocacy

17. UNI Global Union

Asia/Pacific

18. Association for Community Development, Bangladesh

19. Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU)

20. Batis Center for Women, Philippines

21. Cividep, India

22. Cambodian Center for Human Rights

23. Caritas Lebanon Migrant Center, Lebanon

24. Center for Indian Migrant Studies, India

25. Center for Migrant Advocacy (CMA), Philippines

26. Community Legal Education Center, Cambodia

27. Community Resource Centre, Thailand

28. Equitable Cambodia

29. Greenwatch Dhaka, Bangladesh

30. Humanitarian Organisation for Migration Economics (HOME), Singapore

31. Hope Workers Center, Taiwan

32. Hsinchu Catholic Diocese Migrants & Immigrants Service Center (HMISC), Taiwan

33. Human Rights Defenders and Promoters (HRDP), Myanmar

34. Human Rights and Development Foundation, Thailand

35. Human Rights Working Group (Indonesia)

36. Inclusive Development International, Cambodia

37. Indian Media Forum in the United Arab Emirates

38. Indian National Rural Labour Federation (INRLF)

39. International Migrants Alliance Research Foundation, Bangladesh

40. Jakarta Legal Aid Institute (LBH Jakarta), Indonesia

41. Kanlungan Center, Philippines

42. KontraS, Indonesia

43. Legal Support for Children and Women (LSCW), Cambodia

44. Migrant Care, Indonesia

45. Migrant Domestic Workers Welfare Trust, India

46. Migrant Forum India

47. Migrants Rights Council India

48. Migrant Support Qatar

49. Migrant Workers Rights Network, Thailand

50. National Domestic Workers Movement, India

51. Pakistan Rural Workers Social Welfare Organization (PRWSWO)

52. Pourakhi, Nepal

53. Pravasi Nepali Coordination Committee (PNCC), Nepal

54. Refugee and Migratory Movements Research Unit (RMMRU), Bangladesh

55. Slave Free Seas, New Zealand

56. Solidarity Network with Migrants Japan

57. State Enterprises Workers’ Relations Confederation (SERC), Thailand

58. Tamilandu domestic Workers Union, India

59. Tamil Nadu Domestic Workers Welfare Trust, India

60. Tamkeen Fields for Aid, Jordan

61. Thai Labour Solidarity Committee (TLSC)

62. Transient Workers Count Too, Singapore

63. Uniting Church in Australia, Synod of Victoria and Tasmania

64. Welfare Association for the Rights of Bangladeshi Emigrants (WARBE) Development Foundation

65. Women's Rehabilitation Centre (WOREC) Nepal

66.  Youth Action Nepal

Africa

67. Egiclan Energy Producing Host Landlords Nigeria

North America

68. American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO), United States

69. Fair World Project, United States

70. Farmworker Association of Florida, United States

71. Food Chain Workers Alliance, United States

72. Four Freedoms Forum, United States

73. Green America, United States

74. Hawaii Institute for Human Rights, United States

75. International Brotherhood of the Teamsters, United States and Canada

76.  International Labor Rights Forum, United States

77. Lawyers’ Rights Watch Canada

78. United Food & Commercial Workers International Union, CLC (United States & Canada)

Europe

79. Centre for Research on Multinational Corporations (SOMO), Netherlands

80. Danwatch, Denmark

81. Eettisen Kaupan Puolesta (Eetti), Finland

82. Environmental Justice Foundation, United Kingdom

83. Ihmisoikeusliitto (Finnish League for Human Rights)

84. Fairfood International, Netherlands

85. Finnish Food Workers’ Union (SEL)

86. Finnwatch, Finland

87. Finn Church Aid FCA, Finland

88.  Front Line Defenders, Ireland

89.  Kepa, Finland

90. NaZemi, Czech Republic

91. Platform of Filipino Migrant Organistions in Europe, Netherlands

92. Polish Institute for Human Rights and Business

93. Suomen Lähetysseura, Finland

94. Swedwatch, Sweden

95. Trade Union Congress (TUC), United Kingdom

96. Trade Union Pro, Finland

97. Trade Union for the Public and Welfare Sectors, Finland 

98. Trade Union Solidarity Centre of Finland (SASK)

99. Transnational Institute (TNI), Netherlands

100.  Transnational Migrant Platform, Netherlands

Individuals

1. Holy Allan, Hong Kong

2.  Regina Fuchs, Germany

3.  Meena Gopal, India

4. Ray Jureidini

5. Christopher Ng, Singapore

6. Mahendra Pandey, Nepal

7. Bindhulakshmi Pattadath, India

8. S Irudaya Rajan

9. Mehru Vesuvala

10. Yuyun Wahyuningrum

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