| Burmese Find No
Reprieve from Low Pay, Harsh Work
Marwaan Macan-Markar (IPS)
MAE SOT, Thailand, October 1, 2033:
Mizzima News (www.mizzim.com):
After two years of passively accepting her
employer's orders, Khin Wa finally found the courage to be
defiant. She refused to give into his latest demand - work
a 14-hour shift after completing a gruelling 28-hour one that
she had just completed a while ago.
But she was not alone. There were others who were moved likewise,
over 70 of
her colleagues, all Burmese migrants, employed at a garment
factory in this town in Tak province, close to the Thai-Burma
border.
The 23-year-old Wa knew the risk she was taking for this
display of solidarity on a recent Monday in September. ''We
can be fired any day for doing this,'' said the thin, mild-mannered
Burmese at the entrance to the factory, Siriwat Garments.
Her worry is not misplaced in this factory -- which produces
clothes bearing
internationally known names such as Dockers, a brand that
belongs to the U.S.-based clothing giant Levi Strauss &
Co.
A room adjacent to the factory floor has on display dressing
gowns in shades of dark blue and black with labels on the
collar that read, 'Dockers Sleepwear Collection, 100 percent
cotton, Made in Thailand'. But the hostility that Wa and her
colleagues had to endure -- including threats of deportation
by the factory owner - is only the latest in a growing list
of labour rights violations prevalent in Mae Sot.
The past 12 months have seen incidents ranging from a knitting
factory owner
refusing to pay 131 Burmese migrants two months wages, owners
getting the
police to raid factories to arrest undocumented migrant workers
in order to
evade having to pay them, and workers being dismissed from
their factory and
subsequently beaten for protesting this.
On top of that, those crusading for the rights of migrant
workers like Moe Swe have catalogued other abuses commonly
found in most of the 210 factories - often set behind high
walls and steel gates and with at times one or two buildings
shaped like warehouses -- located in this town.
Workers are not given adequate equipment like masks for protection,
some work in crowded environments and some factories have
bad ventilation, says
Swe of Yaung Chi Oo Workers Association, a Mae Sot-based group
of Burmese
migrants.
The workers have very little time even to go to the toilet.
Most are expected to sit at wooden benches and work for stretches
that often last 14 hours daily from Monday through Saturday
and nine hours on Sundays, adds Swe.
''The workers only get a day off once a month after they
get paid,'' he reveals. ''And it is very difficult to get
sick leave.''
But for Swe, whose crusade on behalf of the Burmese workers
has angered local authorities and led to intelligence officials
monitoring his office, the violation that troubles the workers
most is that of being underpaid.
''Under Thai labour law the workers should get the minimum
wage, 133 baht
(3.25 U.S. dollars) a day, but that is not happening,'' says
Pranom Somwong
of the Migrant Action Programme (MAP), a group lobbying for
migrants' rights. ''The factories are only paying them 50
baht (1.25 dollars) to 80 baht (two dollars) a day.''
Consequently, the factories in Mae Sot have gained notoriety
as sweat shops
or, even worse, as places forcing the Burmese migrants into
what critics call ''slave-labour like conditions''.
''Mae Sot is the cesspool of labour rights of Thailand. All
labour laws are violated,'' says Phil Robertson, head of the
Thai office of the American Centre for International Labour
Solidarity, a Washington D.C.-based international non-governmental
organisation. ''You find the most systemic oppression of workers
in Thailand.''
For the likes of Robertson, this vicious combination of low
pay and rampant abuse is the outgrowth of factory owners'
exploitation of migrant workers, who, be they legal or undocumented,
are in a vulnerable position in Thailand.
The migrants' predicament is reflected also in the reports
of hundreds of Burmese workers who are deported daily by Thai
authorities.
Currently, there are over an estimated one million migrant
workers from Burma, majority of whom have no documents granting
them permission to work. Of that number, close to 80,000 live
and work in Mae Sot, of which only about 30,000 have work
permits.
The flow of migrant workers to Mae Sot gained pace in the
mid-1990s, when this town known for being a trading outpost
between Thailand and Burma was converted into a production
centre for garment factories.
All those who come are Burmese fleeing the deteriorating
political and economic conditions in their country.
Most of the jobs they are driven to are shunned by Thai workers
and are described as ''dangerous and dirty'' by labour rights
activists - ranging from work on farms, on construction sites,
fishing and in garment factories.
Yet there is little dispute that they have been a major boost
to Mae Sot's factories and to this country's economy.
In April, the Federation of the Tak Industrialists Chapter,
a body that includes the factory owners in Mae Sot, declared
in a report that the region had earned nearly five billion
baht (125 million dollars) during the preceding 12 months.
Besides the Dockers label, other labels on clothes produced
here that have helped rake in such income are those that often
fill the shops in glamorous
boutiques or fancy shopping malls in cities across Asia, Europe
and the United States.
They include the rugged outdoor garments bearing the Camel
adventure wear
label, one for 'The Blue Revolution since 1960, Jack and Jean's
Macanna, U.S.A,' and Abercombie and Fitch.
For its part, however, Levis Strauss & Co., which sells
the Dockers line of clothing, declares on its website that
it does not support the abuse or exploitation of labour in
the production of its clothes.
''In 1991, we became the first worldwide company to establish
a comprehensive ethical code of conduct for manufacturing
and finishing contractors working with the company,'' it said.
But that appears to be of little consolation to migrant workers
like Wa, who, together with her colleagues, lodged a complaint
with labour protection officials following the long hours
they were forced to work to meet the
factory's new production orders.
''There is little else they can do,'' says migrant labour
rights activist Swe. ''That is why they always feel like victims.''
(Inter Press Service) |