India’s garment workers sewn up
CHENNAI: A fish tank with expensive Arowana fish is prominently displayed in many factories making hosiery in the Indian textile hub of Tirupur – the owners believe it will bring them wealth.
But any prosperity is limited to factory owners. Little profit trickles down to the tens of thousands of workers, says filmmaker PR Amudhan, who has made a documentary chronicling the plight of those at the bottom of a global supply chain.
The name of his film, Dollar City, refers to the southern Indian city which is home to an expanding garment industry, one of the pillars of India’s economy, and the foreign exchange it generates through exports.
“The worker earns very little in the city that is often referred to as dollar city. And today, there is complicit silence on the issue, even the super-exploited worker is not complaining,” Amudhan says.
The film has been screened 50 times in India since its release on May 1, to audiences that include manufacturers, workers and policy-makers – sparking a debate on what some unions fear is the acceptance of exploitative conditions in the sector.
“The documentary has revealed the enormous power wielded by the garment industry, the abominable conditions in which factory workers live and work in Tirupur,” Sujatha Mody, president of the Garment and Fashion Workers Union, wrote in a blog after watching it.
India is one of the world’s largest textile and garment manufacturers. Many of the workers employed in the $40 billion-a-year (R562 billion) industry are trapped in debt bondage, face abuse or are forced to work long hours in poor conditions, campaigners say.
Traditionally, the dyeing units, spinning mills and apparel factories have used cheap labour from villages across the southern state of Tamil Nadu to cater to the demand from Western high street shops.
“Tirupur is a massive attraction for young workers because the city promises a better future,” said Amudhan. “But if they want to be part of it, they have to follow the script. There’s no room for questions or protest, not even when the better future does not materialise.”
The documentary, which also examines the government’s complacency in implementing labour laws, featured the uncomplaining voices of workers from Tirupur.
But at screenings in Chennai, New Delhi and Hyderabad, this silence was questioned. “I view it as a collective crime, where everyone is equally responsible, even the worker,” Amudhan said. “It has the workers’ consent, the unions are lethargic, the government is complacent and aspirational manufacturers are busy chasing profits.” – Thomson Reuters Foundation
I view it as a collective crime, where everyone is responsible