Above photo: The âMake Amazon Payâ logo projected onto Amazonâs campus in Hyderabad, India. Make Amazon Pay campaign.
Demonstrations are planned in five continents.
An international group of climate activists and Amazon warehouse workers have launched an online campaign called âMake Amazon Pay,â calling on the tech giant to provide better working conditions for its employees and to reduce its expanding carbon footprint. The protests come just as the New York Times reports that the Seattle-based company has been on a hiring spree this year, expanding its global workforce.
âDuring the Covid-19 pandemic, Amazon became a trillion dollar corporation, with CEO Jeff Bezos becoming the first person in history to amass $200 billion in personal wealth,â the campaign states on its website. âMeanwhile, Amazon warehouse workers risked their lives as essential workers, and faced threats and intimidation if they spoke out for their rights to a fair wage.â
Launched on Black Friday, the campaign provides a list of demands for Amazon, which include raising pay for workers in Amazonâs warehouses, extending paid sick leave, and allowing workers to organize in unions. The campaign also tasks Amazon with âcommitting to zero emissions by 2030â and paying back society by âending partnerships with police forces and immigration authorities that are institutionally racistâ and âpaying taxes in full, in the countries where the real economic activity takes place.â
The campaign lists a wide variety of international partners, including Progressive International, Amazon Workers International, 350.org, Greenpeace, and more. And the organization has planned a number of demonstrations in countries around the world. âToday thereâs a global day of action with strikes, protests, and stunts across five continents,â James Schneider, the communications director for Progressive International, tells The Verge.
#Amazon has doubled profits through COVID19 but they have still not paid suppliers in Bangladesh for finished orders cancelled during the pandemic.
âGarment workers stand with #MakeAmazonPay
đFair wages & union rights for all Amazon supply chain workers now! @IndustriALL_GU pic.twitter.com/Z7hEQZPkJ3â Nazma Akter (@NazmaAkter73) November 27, 2020
The first demonstration got underway with a strike in Sydney, Australia, he says. Stunts â some in person and some online â are planned to take place in the Philippines, Bangladesh, India, Germany, Poland, Spain, Luxembourg, France, Greece, the United Kingdom, the United States, and more. Organizers have projected the âMake Amazon Payâ slogan on Amazon buildings in London, Berlin, and Hyderabad. A hashtag of #MakeAmazonPay is listed on the campaignâs website, and those who support the initiative can sign a petition on the site to âtell Jeff Bezos directly.â
âWeâre asking people to add their name to those common demands and to donate to the strike funds for Amazon workers,â Schneider says. âSo, today is just the start of the campaign. We aim to build the strike fund to enable further strikes and protests following this day of action.â
The Make Amazon pay campaign comes at the end of a dynamic year for Amazon. The pandemic created an increased demand for Amazonâs online shopping services, pushing the company to greatly expand its workforce in 2020. Amazon now employees more than 1.2 million employees around the world, after adding 427,300 workers between January and October, according to the New York Times.
At the onset of the pandemic, Amazon workers staged protests in an attempt to get the company to take COVID-19 seriously. In October, Amazon revealed that 19,816 of its front-line workers have contracted the virus. On Thanksgiving, Amazon said it would provide holiday bonuses for its employees, with full-time workers receiving $300 and part-time workers receiving $150.
âThe pandemic has exposed how Amazon places profits ahead of workers, society, and our planet,â the coalition says on its website. âAmazon takes too much and gives back too little. It is time to Make Amazon Pay.â
Source: Popularresistance.org







