09 November 2012 | www.scandasia.com,
news Newsdesk
In
Cambodia, faintings occurred every day for five years in a single
factory supplying to some of the biggest international brands, according
to the Cambodian Legal Education Centre’s recent study.
At
M&V garment factory, Swedish brand H&M’s supplier in Cambodia,
three or four workers fainted each day for years until just weeks ago
when the management installed new fans.
The workers, line
leaders and union officials were split up into different groups and
interviewed by the Cambodian Legal Education Centre (CLEC) on 20 October
at M&V; all provided the same response. Those results were
corroborated by the Phnom Penh Post’s interviews with workers who said
at least one or two workers fainted each day for years.
The
Swedish brand’s supplier, M&V factory, has had its reputation dogged
by repeated mass fainting incidents, including two in August alone. It
is now the target of a media campaign in Sweden opposing exploitative
labour practices.
Moeun Tola, head of the labour program at
CLEC, said workers had told him the factory had begun acting swiftly to
remove workers immediately after they fainted in a bid to avoid
hysteria-driven mass fainting, but the individual cases had continued.
Workers
said the causes of the fainting included lack of food, uneven
ventilation in the factory, bad smells and excessive hours, with some
employees working overtime seven days a week, Tola said.
Anna
Eriksson, from H&M’s Communications and Press Department, said the
company had devised a remediation plan with M&V that introduced a
grievance system to the factory, an environmental health safety
committee, temperature monitoring and other improvements to ventilation.
“This
is an industry-wide problem that needs to be addressed. Similar
incidents have happened at a number of garment factories in Cambodia at
suppliers producing for several different companies, also at factories
where H&M is not present,” she said in an email.
"Routines
had been introduced to ensure overtime was strictly voluntarily at the
Kampong Chhnang factory, while top management were holding monthly
meetings with workers and middle managers were being trained in how to
prevent heat stress," Eriksson added.
Original news source: http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2012110759624/National-news/a-factorys-fainting-crisis.html
No comments:
Post a Comment