Closed Down in Burma.

AuthorRothschild, Matthew
PositionClothing will no longer be imported from Myanmar - Brief Article

Within hours of a press conference by Representative Cynthia McKinney and the National Labor Committee, the Pentagon announced on December 21 that the Army and Air Force Exchange Service, which runs 1,400 stores at military installations around the world, will no longer import clothing from Burma. According to The New York Times, the AAFES "had imported $138,290 in clothing from Myanmar despite a ban by the Clinton Administration on investing in that country."

McKinney, a member of the House Armed Services Committee, had just announced that she and fourteen of her colleagues were asking the Government Accounting Office to investigate the Pentagon's ties to Burmese sweatshops.

"Last week, President Clinton awarded the Medal of Freedom, America's highest civilian award, to Aung San Suu Kyi, Burma's Nobel Prize-winning advocate for democracy," McKinney said on December 21. "At that very moment, she was being held under house arrest by a brutal military regime that has earned worldwide condemnation for repression and the use of forced labor. Yet, the U.S. military has decided to support this oppressive regime, and undermine the efforts of President Clinton and human rights groups worldwide. I cannot understand what the Pentagon must be thinking. The fact that our Department of Defense is...

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