BANGKOK, Thailand -- Activists holding a giant cutout of
Nike's logo demonstrated inside a hotel where Tiger Woods was
being
honored, urging him to ask the company to improve working
conditions in Thailand.
Protesters in Bangkok disagree with Nike's employment practices in Thailand, and hope Tiger Woods will see their point.
About two dozen labor union workers and students marched into
the riverside Shangri-La hotel while Woods was in a ballroom
receiving an honorary doctorate in sports science from a
university.
Woods, whose mother is Thai, is a national hero in Thailand. He
is in Bangkok for the Johnnie Walker Classic, a golf tournament
that begins Thursday.
After the ceremony, the golf star walked past the protesters
without speaking with them. The protesters, who remained peaceful,
handed a letter to an aide.
The letter said the demonstration was on behalf of the 70,000
workers producing Nike footwear and clothing in Thailand in
subcontracted factories.
"We appeal to you to use your influence as a respected athlete
and as a benefactor of Nike's success to push for better working
conditions," the letter said.
Woods has a $100 million, five-year endorsement deal with Nike,
the sportswear manufacturing company headquartered in Beaverton,
Ore.
The protesters held banners saying: "Tiger Woods Stop
Puttering." Another poster showed a man being pierced by the sharp
end of the curved Nike logo. One protester wore a black hood and
gown and held aloft a giant cutout of the logo in red.
The letter said Nike spends the equivalent of 14,000 workers'
daily wage to pay Woods for one day.
"Even though Nike workers are earning the daily minimum wage,
most of them end up working far more than eight hours a day" as
overtime is needed to make ends meet, it said.
The letter also said workers often are not issued proper safety
equipment and are injured on the job.
"The collection of protesters aren't familiar with our high
standards for Nike factories around the world," Nike spokesman
Vada Manager told The Associated Press.
He cited a September study, which the company helped finance,
that said Nike workers in foreign factories feel safe and believe
they are paid fairly though they want better health care and more
training.
The survey by the Global Alliance for Workers Communities
covered 3,800 Nike workers in Vietnam and Thailand -- about 8
percent of the company's contract employees in the two countries.
Woods could also find himself caught in a political squabble
when he plays at a course suspected to be owned by Thaksin
Shinawatra, a top opposition politician, in violation of asset
disclosure laws.
Thaksin, a billionaire telecommunications tycoon who aspires to
become prime minister, is under investigation. He is accused of
buying the Alpine Golf and Sports Club without disclosing the
purchase.