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- From: harelb@math.cornell.edu (misc.activism.progressive co-moderator)
- Subject: SRI LANKA: WORKERS HAVE NO RIGHTS ON THE TEA ESTATES
- Message-ID: <1992Aug27.182034.11103@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Date: Thu, 27 Aug 1992 18:20:34 GMT
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- Topic 201 IPS:Sri Lanka: Workers Have No
- hrcoord apc.labour 10:05 am Aug 27, 1992
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- From: Human Rights Coordinator <hrcoord>
- Subject: IPS:Sri Lanka: Workers Have No
-
- /* Written 12:06 am Aug 27, 1992 by newsdesk in cdp:ips.englibrary */
- Copyright Inter Press Service 1992, all rights reserved. Permission to re-
- print within 7 days of original date only with permission from 'newsdesk'.
-
- Title: SRI LANKA: WORKERS HAVE NO RIGHTS ON THE TEA ESTATES
-
-
- an inter press service feature
-
- by nadia bilbassy
-
- nuwara eliya, sri lanka, aug 24 (ips) -- sandampapu is a fragile
- looking woman of 52. backbreaking work on a tea plantation in sri
- lanka coupled with the burden of running a home has aged her
- beyond her years.
-
- day in and day out for the last 40 years she has been like a
- machine -- waking up at 4.30 a.m. to make breakfast for the
- family before leaving for work. she returns at 5 and then is off
- to fetch water and firewood after which she makes dinner.
- sandampapu never gets to bed before 11.
-
- a second generation indian tamil, her family were labourers
- recruited from india in the 1830's to work the tea plantations in
- thettattgzlohigmbands like slaves.
-
- ions s released sandampapu and thousands like her from
- bondage, but little else has changed. in a country where 95
- percent of people are literate, 70 percent of plantation workers
- have never had a chance to learn to read and write.
-
- the tea industry is sri lanka's second highest foreign
- exchange earner. but the money has not trickled down to the
- 500,000 tea workers, most of them women, living with their
- families in squalid 'lines' -- rows of one-roomed homes -- on the
- estates.
-
- sri lanka's tea, coconut and rubber plantations under state
- control for two decades, were handed over to private managers
- this year. officials hope this will revive the ailing industry.
-
- but colombo has paid little attention to the workers' long
- standing demands that they should be settled outside the estates.
- this is seen as crucial to improve their lot economically and
- socially.
-
- a tea worker is paid 60 rupees, less than one and a half
- dollars, daily for plucking 18 kgs of leaves. pictures of
- laughing tea workers plucking the fabled ceylon tea on packets in
- western super markets hides the grim reality of their lives.
-
- sandampapu says if she wants to make a little more money she
- has to work at least 10 hours every day. for every extra
- kilogramme she plucks, she is paid three rupees.)7
- 5 in sri lanka's tea plantationxppen fltften the principal
- bread winners. but in this patriarchal society, they have no
- control of their wages. violence and sexual abuse are common
- place. and fights between husbands and wives usual on pay day.
- (more/ips)
-
-
- (story received incomplete)
- n151
-
-