RIGHTS-LAOS: Lapses with Labour - Part 2
'Most workers have limited knowledge, ultimately you don’t know how many hidden killers are in your workplace. The boss knows, but he won't tell you,' Wang Fengping, an engineer who was once employed by Hong Kong-based Gold Peak batteries at their factory in Guondong, China.
In 2008, Wang was unable to walk. Her kidneys had failed and she was dependent on dialysis. According to medical opinion she was unlikely to make old age.
She and 400 other women had been exposed to cadmium and possibly nickel. Their symptoms were consistent with cadmium poisoning. Falling hair, severe body pains, breathing difficulties and kidney failure. The case was reported globally, which didn't stop Gold Peak's CEO being appointed to the Hong Kong Executive Council.
There is suspicion that nickel cadmium batteries could be being manufactured in Oudomxai in Lao's north, where the majority female labour force could be similarly effected, but no one really knows.
The expertise does not exist to monitor the factory, nor to test the workers. Exposure limits, and the protocols needed to achieve them are similarly absent. Detailed sex disaggregated accident or exposure reporting does not occur. There is little outside the capital a worker can do if dismissed for illness. All that is known is that some women have complained of headaches and skin rashes.
Laos like many countries is prey to development imperatives that put investment before safeguards. The New Economic Mechanism of 1986 opened the nation to foreign investment, a consumer economy and the trappings of modernisation, particularly in the cities.
Tuk has been working at a salon and nail bar in central Vientiane for two years. 'I sometimes feel really sick, and I don't eat much.' It may be due to the solvents that she uses in a badly ventilated space. The nail glue contained methyl methacrylate, banned in many western nations for its effects on the liver, skin and lungs. Tuk showed me her hands, which she described as 'itchy and sore.' The piles of skin whitening products behind her all contained hydroquinone which is known to work by stopping the body making melanin (the brown pigment in skin). Melanin protects the skin from cancer, and the chemical used to suppress it is known to cause kidney and liver damage. It's bad for the customer, but worse for the beautician who uses it many times each day. The real cost of white.
'Are they really dangerous?' Tuk asked, her hand sweeping the piles of products. Groups with a special interest in the effects of work on women have been proliferating in Asia, but have yet to take root in Laos.
The major agency for women's affairs, the Lao Women’s Union (LWU), made no mention of workplace health and safety at their annual meeting to review and evaluate their work last week, nor is it a mainstream development topic.
'I wanted to work in a factory,' said Nah, 'but the wage is not what I expected. I sometimes earn less than a dollar per day …. and I work 10 hours. All I do is iron jeans. It's tiring and hot and there is a lot of steam. I have a lot of (vaginal) infections. My back hurts, particularly each month (menstruation).
'The floor is cement and they do not let us sit down. I have no work contract. I did not want one as I want to be able to leave to go home for harvesting and planting. That means that they can sack me at any time if the orders do not come in from overseas.'
Lack of job security, low waged, routinised and boring has characterised women’s work. Nah's work predisposes her to gynaecological problems, the damp and heat enabling thrush to thrive. But she is possibly enumerated as a development success, moving from rural poverty into urban wage slavery.
While women in Laos enjoy social and labour force participation and influence rarely found in other nations, this may count against their long term health in the absence of knowledge and the ability to use it through the instruments of independent labour advocacy. Their strength came from lowland Lao social structures which supported the matrilineal society. Industrialisation is weakening those social bonds, women's status and damaging women's health. There is insufficient countervailing force.
The local director of the Australian labour oriented NGO APHEDA, conceded that most Lao women workers are still unaware of their rights in regards to compensation and health and safety.
So what happens to them if they have an accident? 'They go back to the village so their families can take care of them,' he said. And does having an accident effect their chances of being married? 'Of course,' he replied ruefully.
* all names used are pseudonyms to protect the women interviewed.
This is the second part of a series on gender and disability in Laos ahead of the 30th anniversary of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women. Laos accepted the international treaty in August 1981.
© Inter Press Service (2009) — All Rights Reserved. Original source: Inter Press Service
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