NED Grantees Expose Forced Labor in Turkmenistan

Leading human rights groups released a new report exposing systemic forced labor and extortion during the country’s 2020 cotton harvest in Turkmenistan. (Image courtesy of Turkmen News)

Grantee Spotlight: Turkmen News and the Turkmen Initiative for Human Rights

Every year, the government of Turkmenistan forces tens of thousands of citizens to harvest cotton, the second largest export for the country after petroleum. If workers fail to meet their cotton-picking quotas, they face punishment, harassment, or losing their jobs. The cotton products sold across the globe violate laws and other import bans that prohibit the sale of goods made with forced-labor. Despite threats and attacks from one of the world’s most repressive regimes, leading Turkmen human rights groups, Turkmen News and the Turkmen Initiative for Human Rights—National Endowment for Democracy (NED) grantees and members of the Cotton Campaign coalition—released a new report exposing systemic forced labor and extortion during the country’s 2020 cotton harvest in Turkmenistan. [Watch the NED discussion of the groundbreaking report with its authors and experts here.]

“Cotton is a global commodity and doesn’t stay within borders,” says Allison Gill,  the forced labor program director at Global Labor Justice-International Labor Rights Forum, and the coordinator of the Cotton Campaign—a multi-stakeholder coalition that has been working since 2008 to eradicate state-imposed forced and child labor in the cotton sector in Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan. “Forced-labor tainted cotton from Turkmenistan is entering global supply chains of apparel and home goods.”

Policymakers and brands have taken steps to remove forced-labor tainted cotton produced in China from global supply chains and to promote accountability for abuses there, but similar measures have not been taken on Turkmenistan. Although products made with forced labor have been banned by the U.S. Customs and Border control since 2018, Turkmen cotton products frequently are sold through third-party countries. Meanwhile, civil society organizations in Turkmenistan face attacks from the government for monitoring and advocating against human rights abuses, rampant corruption and extortion, and the lack of independent media. [Learn more about NED’s work in Eurasia.}

“Over the last eight years, our monitors have seen threats and intimidation from the government, imprisonment on bogus charges, and complete denial of the problem with forced labor,” explains Ruslan Myatiev, editor and founder of Turkmen News, an independent media human rights organization dedicated to the promotion of free speech and the rule of law in Turkmenistan. “We rely on information sent to us by people who work in the public sector and who receive orders from their supervisors regarding cotton picking. All information obtained from them is supported by audio recordings from staff meetings as well as photographs and videos from the fields.”

Intense corruption is found throughout the supply chains. Teachers, doctors, nurses, and other public sector workers must leave their schools, hospitals, and offices to pick the crops, pay a bribe, or hire replacement workers, under threat of losing their job. Women are affected disproportionately, and often children replace parents unable to go to the fields. Amid the government’s pandemic denial, citizens are transported in crowded buses under freezing conditions. Farmers do not own land or decide which crops to plant.

“Farmers are tied to their land,” says Farid Tukhbatullin, founder and director of the Turkmen Initiative for Human Rights, which provides independent news and information about Turkmenistan through the Chronicles of Turkmenistan website and numerous human rights reports. “They have to follow the practices and laws that are left over and the legacy of the Soviet Union, that actually prevent them from leaving their regions and going to work elsewhere for a long period of time because they have to register locally. We can see that the agricultural sector–similar to other sectors–does not take into account the interests of the rural population but rather focuses on the interest of the state only.” The cotton-picking quotas do not consider the weather or conditions of the land.

Turkmenistan remains a closed society without government transparency or accountability. “The excellent reporting and on-the-ground research from Turkmen News and the Turkmen Initiative for Human Rights demonstrate the continued value of investing in civil society working in states as totalitarian and kleptocratic as Turkmenistan,” says NED program officer and regional expert Jeffrey Bell. “Developing the infrastructure and human capacity to conduct on-the-ground human rights monitoring and reporting is essential to international understanding of the situation inside Turkmenistan. Their courageous work will be a critical asset for democratic activists when change finally comes to Turkmenistan.”

Watch NED’s expert-Led Discussion on forced labor in turkmenistan’s 2020 Cotton Harvest:

Share