Cambodia garment workers struggle to survive
AFP / Bangkok Post | 11 July 2014
PHNOM PENH - After a 10-hour shift stitching
clothes for western brands, Cambodian factory worker Ry Srey Bopha walks
to her tiny shared room, eats leftovers, then sleeps on the floor.
Cambodian garment workers standing on a truck as they travel along a street in Phnom Penh on May 8, 2014
Like many of Cambodia's 650,000 garment workers, who are overwhelmingly women, Bopha's days are monotonous and exhausting, and her diet is poor.
She rarely sees her five-year-old daughter, who is being raised by an elderly grandparent in the countryside.
"Life in the garment factories is very difficult," she told AFP. "But I need the money so I just try to be patient."
Once
hailed as a model for sweatshop-free manufacturing, Cambodia's booming
garment sector has seen working conditions deteriorate as the number of
factories has swelled.
As money and orders have flooded into the industry in recent years, new factories have emerged "that either don't know what legal requirements are... or don't care," said Jason Judd, a technical specialist with the International Labour Organisation's Better Factories Cambodia programme.
"They're not paying attention to legal compliance. They're focused on making money," he said.
From
a violent strike in January, in which four workers died after police
fired live ammunition at protesters, to repeated mass faintings on the
factory floor, the once praised sector has had its reputation dented,
alarming some top western brands.
But workers say that despite the publicity surrounding the protests and some nominal wage increases since, little has changed.
"We're
a pitiful part of this garment industry," Bopha said, adding that she
had recently passed out on the job after inhaling fumes from chemicals
used on the clothes.
"Even if we're sick and cannot work they cut out salaries. We work when we're ill."
- 'Modern day slavery' -
Bopha
works six days a week, starting her shift at 7am and often finishing
late at night as she does extra overtime to make ends meet.
"Sometimes,
we have to work overtime all night," she said, adding that she usually
took home around $130 a month of which she sent $50 home to her family.
"I
often eat leftover rice as I need to save money," she said, adding her
only hope was that her daughter would have a better life than her.
Many female workers say conditions in the factories are such that they are forced to choose between their family and their job.
"I can't keep my daughter here as there is no childcare at the factory," said worker Ton Sam Ol, who has a month-old baby.
Ol planned to ask her mother to care for the baby or "I'll have to quit," she told AFP while breastfeeding the tiny infant.
Ol
was given a small amount of paid maternity leave but many factories
have taken to employing female workers on short-term contracts to avoid
paying such benefits, union leaders say.
Some factories even
terminate the labour contracts of pregnant workers, said Moeun Tola of
the Community Legal Education Center, a local rights group.
As a result, "some workers decided to abort when they become pregnant," he said.
Short term contracts are also a useful means for factories to keep workers in line, he added.
"Workers don't dare turn down overtime or protest conditions. They just work hard even when they're sick," he said.
"Their situation is like modern day slavery," he added.
- 'Endless strikes' -
For impoverished Cambodia, garments are a key source of cash, bringing in around $5.5 billion in export earnings in 2013.
More of that money should be going to workers, union leaders and activists say.
Wages
have been increased several times, most recently in February, but still
remain below what could be considered a "living wage" activists say.
Factory owners say they cannot afford to increase wages and say western brands ordering the clothes must take responsibility.
"We
don't have money. We cannot increase (wages)," said Ken Loo, secretary
general of the Garment Manufacturers Association of Cambodia (GMAC).
Western
brands said during a meeting in May that they were prepared to factor
in the price of higher salaries in Cambodia to avoid production line
delays due to unrest.
Following the mass strike and bloody
crackdown by authorities in January, the minimum wage has been increased
to $100 per month. Workers were demanding $160.
A new union law, currently being drafted by the government, looks set to limit the ability of workers to organise and protest.
"The
freedom of unions will fade away if the draft law is passed," said Rong
Chhun, president of the Cambodian Confederation of Unions.
At least 10 union workers have been arrested and charged over sporadic strikes since the January crackdown.
Twenty
three workers and activists were arrested and convicted over the
January strike in late May but were all freed after their sentences were
suspended.
But the problem of low wages and poor conditions has not gone away.
"If a lot workers go on strike again, I will join them too. We want a decent salary," said Bopha's roommate Em Sophea.
Until
significant progress is made, "the workers will strike and demonstrate
at factories endlessly," said union leader Rong Chhun.
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