Following mass fainting mystery, garment stitchers get pay upped
By Patrick Winn
Global Post
November 25, 2011
In the wake of a mysterious fainting epidemic in Cambodia's clothing factories, garment workers are set to get a pay bump.
By U.S. standards, the raise is minuscule: the workers' $61-per-month minimum wage will increase by $5. But that's a significant amount in Cambodia, among Southeast Asia's poorest nations.
What's unclear, however, is if the pay bump and the fainting woes are connected.
An AFP report suggests that Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen linked the issues by claiming the extra money could help keep workers healthy.
Among the suggested causes of the mass faintings -- a list of possible culprits including bad ventilation, toxic fumes and even some bizarre psychological phenomenon -- was rampant malnutrition among poor stitchers. Extra cash could keep workers from skipping meals.
But this Phnom Penh Post report on the raises makes no mention of the fainting spells in which dozens and even hundreds of workers in separate factories suddenly keeled over.
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