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Plantation workers face poverty and poison
Mageswari Sangaralingam
Consumers’ Association of Penang
Women’s empowerment efforts in Malaysia have been unequal. Plantation workers who sustain the nation’s palm oil and rubber production are still the poorest and most vulnerable. They receive very poor wages, endure sexual harassment, and are the victims of agro-chemical poisoning.
Malaysia registered
impressive economic growth rates in recent years. Despite this growth there are
still vulnerable groups who live in poverty, such as the elderly, the rural
poor, single female headed households, indigenous people of Peninsular and East
Malaysia, migrant workers and unskilled workers. The dynamic changes created by
the process of economic transformation have increased poverty levels for some of
these groups.
A decline in
poverty
Malaysia’s policy
against poverty first took shape with the introduction of the New Economic
Policy (NEP) in 1970, thus emphasizing its importance in overall national
development. When the National Development Policy (NDP) 1991-2000 was introduced
to replace the NEP some modifications were made to the poverty reduction policy
but its basic features were retained. Subsequently the National Economic
Recovery Plan (NERP) also dealt with the need to address the problems of the
poor as a result of the economic downturn following the 1997 financial crisis.
The ultimate
objective of the public policy against poverty, as stated in the NEP, was to
reduce the incidence of poverty by set time periods and eventually to totally
eradicate it. Another objective of the policy was to reduce relative
poverty and income inequality. During the NEP years, the focus was on the
reduction of the gaps between the main ethnic groups, rural and urban dwellers,
and income groups. Reducing intra-ethnic income gaps also became an objective of
the NDP.
The primary
strategies selected to reduce and eradicate poverty were ones which provide
opportunities to the poor to gain employment in higher-paying jobs or activities
in order to increase their incomes and become self-supporting.
Official statistics show that the incidence of poverty among Malaysians
decreased from 7.5% in 1999 to 5.1% in 2002. The number of poor households
declined by 25.6% to 267,900 in 2005.
The overall decline in poverty was attributed to the Government’s efforts to
implement poverty eradication programmes, particularly through the promotion of
income generating projects.
The incidence of poverty is reportedly highest among agricultural, hunting and
forestry workers at 14.5%. Rural households headed by the elderly (65 years old
and above) and female-headed households registered high incidences of poverty at
28.6% and 25.7%.
To assist marginalized sectors of society, the 2005 national budget directed
resources to the disabled, lower income groups, education, indigenous groups,
small businesses, gender development programmes and other social services. There
is also a specific allocation of MYR 37.8 million (USD 10 million) for gender
development programmes. Nevertheless the crux of the issue is how these
allocations are going to be used to implement projects that will truly benefit
the target group.
The forgotten sector
Women plantation workers appear to have been neglected in the Government’s plans
to eradicate poverty and enhance the status of women. The progress achieved so
far in empowering women has been unequal. Women plantation workers still lag
behind, since they are unable to free themselves from the vicious cycle of
poverty they find themselves in.
The plantation
industry is a crucial part of the country’s development. Malaysia is a world
leader in palm oil and natural rubber production and the cultivation of these
crops is a major agricultural activity in the country. Apart from smallholders
who depend on these commodities for their livelihood, there are also waged
labourers employed by plantation companies. In 2005, an estimated 1,268,500
people were employed in the agriculture and fishery sector, which includes farm
workers, plantation workers and forestry workers.
Large segments of the population involved in the agriculture and plantation
sector are poor.
In recent years, the
Consumers’ Association of Penang (CAP) has been working with labourers on oil
palm and rubber plantations on the Peninsula. We have been involved in
occupational health and safety issues, the fight for better wages, securing
basic needs such as housing, health and sanitation, and other social issues such
as domestic violence and alcohol abuse. In the area of occupational health and
safety, the primary concern has been the use of highly hazardous herbicides such
as paraquat, which was only recently banned in Malaysia.
Currently women make up nearly half the workforce on plantations where spraying
a variety of herbicides is an integral part of plantation work. The reason why
plantation companies employ women as herbicide sprayers is because women are
readily available since they are unable to find other jobs. They are also
considered timid, docile and compliant workers, as they do not question
management and are easy to manipulate. Decades ago, when only men were employed
as sprayers, they were not as obliging and did not do as good a job as women do.
Risk factors
Most women on the
plantations were born and raised there, as were their parents and grandparents.
The environment on the plantation is hardly conducive to attaining a decent
education or acquiring the critical skills needed in more specialized sectors of
the economy. Studies have shown that women in poor rural households attain lower
levels of education.
This fact added to the prevailing poverty places women on plantations in a very
vulnerable position.
Lack of education, age and social exclusion therefore diminish women’s
opportunities and limit their possibilities for joining mainstream jobs in the
industrial and service sector. Since most companies provide housing for their
workers, this is a further incentive for women to continue living on the
plantation.
Nowadays many plantations have started employing migrant workers to carry out
this hazardous job. The number of foreign workers, mainly men, employed in the
agriculture sector has increased from 175,834 in 2000 to 327,490 in 2003.
All things being equal, women are nevertheless more affected than men.
Poisoning
In 2004, CAP conducted a study of 11 oil palm plantations located in the
northern states of Malaysia. The study focused on women herbicide sprayers,
their working conditions and the consequent health impacts.
Work on an oil palm plantation is back-breaking and hazardous. Women herbicide
sprayers are expected to carry an 18-litre (4-gallon) drum containing herbicide
and complete 14 to 16 rounds of spraying per day. Tractor spraying is also
conducted on some plantations, where big drums of herbicide are placed on both
sides of the tractor. Two women carry the pumps and spray as the tractor moves.
In either case,
the sprayers themselves are engulfed in a fine mist of herbicide. Recommended
safety measures are rarely employed. The use of protective masks, gloves and
boots is often impractical owing to the hot and humid tropical climate. Due to
the widespread lack of awareness of the hazards of herbicides, inhalation and
skin absorption are the major causes of occupational poisoning cases among women
sprayers.
On the
plantations, management decides which pesticides or herbicides to use as well as
their frequency of application. The majority of workers interviewed did not even
know what herbicides they were using while others identified them only by colour
or odour. The women obligingly carried out their supervisors’ instructions on
proportions and mixing of the herbicides. Most of the women were not even aware
of the toxicity of the chemicals and the dangers that they were being exposed
to.
The only
protection women wear are safety boots and maybe a handkerchief or towel to
cover their mouth and nose. The women complain that management is reluctant to
replace worn personal protective equipment and demand that workers show them the
damaged equipment. Even so, they only replace equipment periodically. Most women
must purchase their own safety boots since they cannot get replacement for torn
boots from their employers. Others do not replace their boots since they cannot
afford to do so.
Miserable
wages
The women work
six days a week on a rotational basis and receive menial wages in return for
their work. Earning their full weekly wage usually involves working long hours
in the blazing sun. Furthermore, fear of losing their job makes them put up with
unpleasant conditions including offensive remarks and undue pressure, while at
times being subject to sexual harassment.
Workers are
paid between MYR 15 to MYR 18 (USD 3.95 to USD 4.75) per day. Each herbicide
sprayer earns MYR 350 to 450 (USD 92 to 118) per month. Some plantation
companies give an extra MYR 2 (about USD 0.50) per day to herbicide sprayers.
This is a clear indication that danger lurks in herbicide spraying compared to
other work. On some plantations, electricity and water bills are deducted from
salaries.
The survey results found that women sprayers are often not in good health. They
suffer from acute and chronic ailments related to their work. Most plantations
provide medical facilities for their workers although most of the time these
facilities are inadequate and ineffective. If the women suffer from major
illnesses that the plantation paramedic cannot treat, they must visit a medical
doctor in the nearest town. Ill health affects productivity directly, so many
illnesses go unreported.
Another disturbing
revelation is that, as they are not provided with protective equipment, workers
who are employed on a contractual basis work in worse conditions and are
expected to manipulate more potent and harmful herbicides, including monosodium
glutamate, and do not have medical coverage.
Limited options
Why do the women remain on the plantations despite the poverty they experience
and exposure to poisons? During the 1980’s many plantations replaced rubber
trees with oil palms due to higher economic returns. Therefore women plantation
workers who were previously skilled rubber tappers lost their source of
livelihood. Some of the women had tapped rubber all of their working-life and
were therefore left in a difficult employment situation. In order not to be
evicted from the plantation, the women had no choice but accept any job offered
by management. Hence the women became herbicide sprayers even though it was not
their choice of work.
As palm oil commodity prices increase in coming years, we can expect Malaysian
production also to increase since it is one of the country’s major crops. This
will further intensify women’s involvement in the sector. Women will find it
increasingly difficult to escape this vicious cycle of poverty and their
increasingly poor health will be the price they pay.
Only those with the determination and willpower to leave the plantation sector
at any cost can break away from poverty. But for some families who leave the
plantation, whether of their own accord or when plantations are converted for
other development projects, poverty will still be a way of life. These families
usually migrate to urban areas, only to join the ranks of the urban poor who
live in squatter settlements. These displaced workers with low levels of
education and skills have to compete with other marginalized groups, including
foreign workers, for low-paying jobs.
There is still work
to be done
The immediate challenge for poverty reduction in Malaysia is to raise the
incomes of the poorest of the poor. In a multi-racial nation with widely and
well-established disparity in economic opportunities and incomes, the Government
must intervene to ensure fairer distribution of opportunities and incomes among
all racial and social groups.
It is difficult to break out of a poverty situation and education is one of the
means by which families on plantations can escape poverty. For this reason,
there is a need for policy and programme interventions to assist and encourage
the children of plantation workers to pursue their education.
To conclude, the
process and policy of development in Malaysia should focus on lower income
groups - including women on plantations - in order to raise their income and
social status, both in absolute and relative terms. This is the most effective
means of achieving social justice, which is the foundation for genuine
development.
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