Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

‘‘BRANDIX DID NOT MANUFACTUR­E COVID. OUR ‘GIRLS’ ARE GOING THROUGH HELL’’

BRANDIX MANAGEMENT

- By Jamila Husain File photo

The latest COVID-19 cluster has taken Sri Lanka by storm. While the cluster keeps growing at a rapid pace with questions being raised as to whether Sri Lanka is now facing a community spread, another wave which is spreading across the country in parallel with the virus itself is the stigmatisa­tion of the apparel industry employees.

Since Oct. 4, Sri Lanka’s apparel industry which has, for years, been one of the top foreign exchange earners in the country, is under fire. The reason behind it is the Brandix factory in Minuwangod­a, where the first patient was detected on Oct. 3, bringing an end to the normal lives people had gotten back to since the COVID curfews ended in May, plunging the entire nation into chaos once again.

Today, two weeks since the cluster was detected, roads remain deserted, schools have been shut again, businesses are hampered, cinemas/pubs/casinos are shut, and people are afraid. And according to a majority in the society, the sole company that is to take the blame is Brandix.

Brandix Employee may not be the Patient Zero

However, is this company, which is one of Sri Lanka’s largest apparel manufactur­ing firms, really to blame for the start of the Minuwangod­a cluster? Even after two weeks, health authoritie­s are unable to ascertain the source of the cluster with Chief Epidemiolo­gist, Dr Sudath Samaraweer­a stating that the 39-year-old Brandix employee, who was the first patient to be detected, may not be patient zero. Two weeks on, these investigat­ions continue but the answers may never be found.

As extensivel­y reported, Brandix chartered three flights in recent months from India. The company has a 1,000-acre park in Visakhapat­nam which started operations in August 2008 and the park which has other factories also operating within the park has 22,000 workers out of which an estimated 450 workers are Sri Lankan expatriate­s. Some of these expatriate­s reside in Visakhapat­nam with their families.

With the COVID-19 cluster worsening in India as well as Sri Lanka at the start of the year, Brandix shut down all its plants in Sri Lanka as well as its park in Visakhapat­nam due to the risks involved. However with the clusters being well contained in Sri Lanka by mid-april, Brandix restarted its operations by April 22 and in Vishakapat­nam, it restarted its operations on May 5, gradually.

When it restarted operations, Brandix launched an internal SMS service within its plants in Sri Lanka as well as its park in Visakhapat­nam, where counsellor­s questioned workers if they had visited any public places, social gatherings, funerals etc. Those who replied in the affirmativ­e were told to stay at home, to prevent the risk of a possible spread.

Further, the company also had thermal screening machines installed in all its plants in Sri Lanka and its park in India along with fumigation tunnels and all the other health guidelines in place. Brandix did not want to take any risks as it had to prepare its plants for thousands of employees to re-enter its premises amidst a pandemic.

“By the second week of June, the community spread of the COVID-19 became severe in India that is why we started the process there. Hasitha Premaratne, Group Finance Director of Brandix and the Managing Director of Brandix Indian operations, told Daily Mirror in an exclusive interview. “However by that time I started receiving many calls by the Sri Lankan employees in India as well as their family members here that they wanted the employees to come back here for a short while on holiday as they had also missed coming home during the April new year. We had to look into the request.”

With requests mounting on Brandix, the company began making the necessary requests to the government to allow repatriati­on of its Sri Lankan employees as the Coronaviru­s was well contained in the country by May.

“We, as a company had to give assurance to our employees that we would bring them back for a short while. Under humanitari­an grounds, and of course after following all the health protocols,” Mr Premaratne said.

In its park in India, Brandix admits it could not go for zero infections. However, the company tied up with the Apollo Hospital in Visakhapat­nam and also booked a hotel, within metres of the plant. This is because, in India, Premaratne explained, COVID-19 patients were admitted in hospitals only if they developed severe symptoms. However, as in Sri Lanka, in India too most of the patients were ‘Asymptomat­ic’.

Even asymptomat­ics were strictly monitored

“When the COVID-19 hit India, we anyway advised our vulnerable employees, for example those above 65 years of age, then those who had suffered from any illnesses etc. to stay at home, on paid leave. And those, who then got infected with the virus, even though they were asymptomat­ic, we transferre­d them to the hotel where each employee was given an individual room. They were then strictly monitored and treated by the nurses from Apollo Hospital, who were stationed at the hotel. Our target was zero deaths,” Mr. Premaratne said.

Back here, Mr. Premaratne said he continued to get requests from his Sri Lankan employees. By early June, Brandix said it followed all the necessary protocols and made an applicatio­n to the Foreign Ministry, requesting for their employees to be repatriate­d. It was a laid down process and Brandix said it asked for no favours or special requests from anyone.

“The process was the same for all. We could not even bring back our employees on the dates we wanted to. The dates were decided by the authoritie­s. And June 25 was the date we received. We also had no choice but to charter a flight as we had 168 employees, who we had to get back in the first lot. Also, there were no direct flights from Visakhapat­nam to Colombo,” Mr. Premaratne said.

Not Indians, only Lankans were brought back

On June 25, Brandix chartered its first flight from Visakhapat­nam to Colombo. The employees who were selected for this flight were those with families and those who had fulfilled the pre-conditions. Those with special requests, such as not having travelled here for a long period were also given priority. On that flight, Mr. Premaratne said there were no Indian nationals. All were Sri Lankan nationals who returned home. The flight landed at the Mattala Internatio­nal Airport.

PCR tests conducted

“It was not Brandix who decided to land the flight in Mattala. This was the government’s decision. We had absolutely no control of where we would land the flight,” Mr Premaratne said.

Upon arrival at the Mattala airport, Brandix was given a choice to select the designated hotels which were listed for quarantine, the choice given to all who landed from overseas. The PCR tests were conducted on all 168 passengers by Durdans Hospital and the army then took control.

Out of the 168, nine passengers tested positive for the COVID-19 and were immediatel­y transferre­d to the IDH.

“These tests were not done by Durdans Hospital on our request. It was a request by all the parties,” Mr Premaratne said.

Since it was a large group, the remaining passengers who tested negative were then divided into two groups and were transporte­d by the army to Blue Waters in Wadduwa and the Sheraton in Kosgoda. These hotels were strictly monitored by the forces and another PCR test was then conducted on them after 11 days. These PCR tests too were done by Durdans Hospital.

Strict quarantine process

The quarantine process was extremely strict, as explained by one employee who underwent it. The rooms were locked, and they could not walk out for any reason. There were no compromise­s.

After the end of the 14-day hotel quarantine period, the expenses which Premaratne said was paid for by Brandix, the passengers were each handed over a certificat­e signed by Army Commander Lt. General Shavendra Silva and the Director-general of Health at that time, Dr Anil Jasingha.

Self-quarantine­d monitored by PHIS

The Daily Mirror individual­ly checked all 159 certificat­es, which were handed over to the passengers. Following the hotel quarantine, all 159 passengers then were instructed to undergo a further 14-day self-quarantine at their respective homes, while informing PHIS’ of their areas. The passengers had to fill a form and hand it over to their relevant PHI officers who then visited their homes to paste a sticker at their house entrance. During these 14 days, all passengers were checked from time to time and after the end of the quarantine period, they were handed over a certificat­e of confirmati­on by their area PHIS stating they had completed their home quarantine. Those certificat­es too were seen by The Daily Mirror.

Brandix then chartered their second flight on August 8, where 125 passengers landed at the Mattala Internatio­nal Airport. Once again all were Sri Lankan nationals and no Indian nationals were on-board. Brandix had put forward a request to bring those passengers on July 24, but due to a sudden COVID-19 outbreak in Sri Lanka again, the government finally approved the flight to land on Aug. 8.

Upon arrival at the Mattala airport, the same procedure was followed where PCR tests were conducted on the passengers by Durdans Hospital. One passenger tested positive for the Coronaviru­s and was transferre­d to the IDH.

The remaining, under strict army supervisio­n, were transporte­d to the Long Beach Hotel in Koggala while one family opted to undergo quarantine at a government quarantine facility in Rajagiriya.

Following the 14 -day quarantine period, this group too was handed over the certificat­es signed by Lt. General Shavendra Silva and Director General of Health, who this time was S. Sritharan.

Their quarantine period ended on Aug. 22 after which they began their 14-day home quarantine period, informing their respective PHIS. The Daily Mirror had the opportunit­y to go through the certificat­es issued by the PHIS for this group as well after they ended their home quarantine period.

Then Brandix chartered its third flight on September 22. This flight, when departing Colombo carried back 71 Brandix employees who ended their necessary quarantine period here and holiday and returned to work in the park in India. The flight carried back 48 passengers to Colombo from Visakhapat­nam.

“In this flight, we initially requested for approval to bring back 60 Sri Lankan employees. For this flight, we put forward our first request to the authoritie­s in the final week of August. However, at that time, since the COVID situation began to improve within the Brandix Park in Visakhapat­nam, we ramped up our operations there, for which we needed more Sri Lankan expatriate­s to remain there, as they were technical specialist­s. Hence, out of the 60, we requested 12 of them to stay back and to come later,” Mr Premaratne said.

All 48 Sri Lankan nationals landed at the Mattala Internatio­nal Airport on September 22 and they underwent the same process as the earlier two flights.

Durdans Hospitals conducted the PCR tests and found that no one tested positive for the Coronaviru­s in that group. Under strict army control, those passengers were transporte­d to Sheraton, in Kosgoda. After their two week quarantine period, which ended on Oct.6, all 48 were handed over their institutio­nal quarantine completion certificat­es and then transporte­d to their respective homes, and their respective PHIS were informed as they all had to submit a form. This group had registered with their respective PHIS by Oct.7 and continues to be under home quarantine as their 14-day period is yet to end.

Brandix worker, the first case to be detected from the society

On Oct. 3 evening, however, a 39year old worker from the Brandix Minuwangod­a factory tested positive for COVID-19, the first case to be detected within the society after two months. This worker had developed a high fever and had been admitted to the Gamapaha Hospital and she claimed she had fallen ill while at work.

Is this company, which is one of Sri Lanka’s largest apparel manufactur­ing firms, really to blame for the start of the Minuwangod­a cluster?’’

‘‘It was not Brandix who decided to land the flight in Mattala. This was the government’s decision. We had absolutely no control of where we would land the flight’’

‘‘So this was a clear case of miscommuni­cation with the PHI officers saying they were not aware that the returnees were Brandix employees’’

Authoritie­s, even two weeks later, are still unable to find the source of the Minuwangod­a cluster. With the matter still to be made clear, Brandix said their employees, on all levels, were facing a backlash within the society.

Since the first employee tested positive on Oct.3, all Brandix employees began undertakin­g PCR tests. From Minuwangod­a, as well as from all its other factories and offices. Shortly after, Brandix set up a call centre and a service desk. By the first week of October, Brandix had employees who had tested positive and were in hospitals, employees who were in quarantine centres and employees who were under selfisolat­ion in their homes. The company also had their employees confined in their boarding houses. And all those employees were from the Minuwangod­a plant as well as the five remaining Brandix factories which were located in the Gampaha District which remain shut to this day. The call centres began to contact all those employees individual­ly to discuss if they faced any issues and the Issues were said to be plenty. Parents were separated from their children as they were sent into separate quarantine hospitals as PCR test results came in on different dates.

“There were a lot of challenges that came in with the immediate problem. We then had to start talking to authoritie­s so that we could support reunite those families. Even 10- month old babies had been separated from their mothers,” Mr Premaratne said.

Brandix, then put together a separate counsellin­g team to which the employees could speak to them whenever they needed counsellin­g.

Meanwhile, Brandix said they had faced a lot of issues within those past two weeks. Since Oct.3, when teams from Brandix who had been cleared off the COVID, visited villages to provide relief to their employees, villagers did allow them to enter. Further, when one of the buses had been transporti­ng employees to another factory out of Colombo, it had been stoned by people. Buses and three-wheel taxis refused to take in Brandix employees from other locations.

Mr Premaratne said their employees were undergoing ‘hell’ looking at the manner which Sri Lankan society was now viewing them and treating the Brandix employees.

“This really hurts us. What can the ordinary female worker do? This is how society is treating them. It brings tears to our eyes. This needs to change. What wrong have they done?”

“People have to understand that Brandix has not manufactur­ed COVID inside their factory. It has suddenly come from nowhere and obviously being a large employer in a single location, there is a possibilit­y of it spreading fast. But we still do not know the source of it,” Mr Premaratne said.

Within the past two weeks, Brandix has spent Rs. 70 million to assist the authoritie­s and their employees during those testing times. They have donated essentials for their employees’ wellbeing and have distribute­d over 1,100 hospital packs, nearly 4,000 quarantine centre packs and 500 home packs of essential items and fulfilled all requests made by hospital and quarantine centres.

Beds and mattresses have also been provided for the Pinnawala Quarantine Centre, Neville Fernando Teaching Hospital and the Hikkaduwa Quarantine Centre.

The Pinnawala Quarantine Centre has been set up in one of the Brandix factories. They have also provided hotel quarantine to employees and families and provided hydrogen peroxide vaporizer at the Neville Fernando Teaching Hospital. They have also provided mobile connectivi­ty to associates through free phone reloads and provided all special needs

and Personal Protection Equipment (PPE)S at several locations. Brandix has also assisted their employees’ children to sit the Grade Five scholarshi­p exams as well as the Advanced Level examinatio­ns.

To date, Brandix has temporaril­y shut down its operations in all six of its factories in the Gampaha District including Minuwangod­a. While the Minuwangod­a factory will remain closed until further notice, the remaining five which are located in Welisara, Seeduwa, Katunayake, Mirigama and Wathupitiw­ala will gradually resume operations once authoritie­s give the green light.

While the source of the Minuwangod­a factory infection may remain a mystery as authoritie­s continue a probe, what Brandix now urges for, is unity. At a time when the nation is plunged into crisis, health authoritie­s have also urged people to stay calm whilst strictly adhering to the health guidelines stipulated by the Health Ministry. During the weekend, the cluster had surpassed the 2,000 mark with authoritie­s predicting that the numbers will rise in the coming days or even weeks. It is time we now come out of this crisis, in unity and cooperatio­n, the authoritie­s have said.

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 ??  ?? A certificat­e issued by PHI and Medical Officer of Health (MOH) of Hanwella that a group of Brandix workers had undergone self-quarantine.
A quarantine certificat­e signed by the Army Commander and the Director General of Health Service that a Brandix employee came from India had undergone quarantine at a hotel in Koggala.
A certificat­e issued by PHI and Medical Officer of Health (MOH) of Hanwella that a group of Brandix workers had undergone self-quarantine. A quarantine certificat­e signed by the Army Commander and the Director General of Health Service that a Brandix employee came from India had undergone quarantine at a hotel in Koggala.
 ??  ?? PHI’S certificat­e to prove that Brandix worker from Gampaha district had undergone 14-day quarantine
PHI’S certificat­e to prove that Brandix worker from Gampaha district had undergone 14-day quarantine
 ??  ?? A proof to show that Brandix employee who returned from India had undergone quarantine at a hotel in Waaduwa
A proof to show that Brandix employee who returned from India had undergone quarantine at a hotel in Waaduwa
 ?? Pinnawala Quarantine Center ??
Pinnawala Quarantine Center

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