Journey to nowhere
S. DORAIRAJ - Tirupur and Usilampatti
It is an “out of the frying pan, into
the fire” experience for many who flock to Tirupur from across Tamil
Nadu
K. Subramania Pillai was at the end of his tether. “Around 32 years
have rolled by since I came to Tirupur. But I can’t see any progress in
my life. The unpaid debt has accumulated to Rs.21,660 as on July 5,
2010. I have been under severe stress for the past four months as I find
no way to clear the debt. I do not want to live any more either, as I am
unable to bear the humiliation.
All my efforts to find a way out have failed. I am just commencing my
journey without a destination in mind. I have no problem with my
children. My humble request is to find a good bridegroom for my youngest
daughter,” wrote the 75-year-old man in a note he posted to his son, S.
Kaliappan, who lived at S. Periyapalayam on the outskirts of Tirupur.
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The row houses in Tirupur where the migrant workers of the
garment industry stay |
Girls working in a factory
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Garment workers carrying on with their jobs |
S. Kaliappan, a worker in the garment industry, shows the
photograph of his father, K. Subramania Pillai, and the note he
left |
His body was found two kilometres away from S. Periyapalayam a couple
of days later.
Pillai, a native of Tuticorin district, had migrated to Tirupur in
1978 seeking a job in the garment industry. With his Secondary School
Leaving Certificate qualification, he got a kanakkupillai (accountant)
job in a garment factory with a starting pay of Rs 500. The last monthly
salary he drew was Rs 3,000.
The father of four daughters and a son, Pillai mentioned in his
suicide note that he had realized that he could not continue in the job
for long, particularly in a world where man competed with machines. With
his meagre earnings he was not even able to buy a house of his own
despite serving the factory for over three decades.
Sitting at his gloomy, rented single-room ‘row house’, a
grief-stricken Kaliappan, who is a ‘cutting master’ in a garment
factory, said, “We were living here with my father. I moved out with my
wife and daughters only recently as landlords don’t want joint
families.”
Shortly after receiving Pillai’s suicide note, Kaliappan launched a
frantic search for his father in Tuticorin, Kovilpatti and Tirunelveli,
thinking that he might have gone to see some of his relatives living
there. But he got a terrible shock as he came to know that the
unidentified body in the mortuary of the Government hospital, about
which a newspaper had reported on July 9, was his father’s. He did not
have the nerve to see his father’s body lying there in a highly
decomposed state.
Pillai’s case is also the typical example of how insensitive and
hostile the bureaucracy can be to the sufferings of people working in
the informal sector. Two months later, 44-year-old Kaliappan is
Kaliappan’s plea to the police and the hospital authorities is to find a
way out of the dispute and issue the death certificate to him. He has
another appeal to the authorities - “Please upgrade the facilities such
as air-conditioning in the mortuary so as to at least ensure a proper
burial to the victims.”
The story of Muthiah (name changed), 25, a resident of Chellam Nagar,
shows how garment factory workers are driven to the edge, particularly
given the seasonal nature of the industry, which mainly depends on
export orders. It is difficult to find employment during the off-season,
which may last for weeks together between July and December. Muthiah’s
father, a farm worker from Theni district, settled in Tirupur 15 years
ago and became a construction worker. All the family members in the
joint family had to work to supplement the family income. Muthiah’s
brother works as a tailor in a garment unit.
One day, his father scolded the unemployed Muthiah for not trying to
find a job in the garment units. Already under tremendous stress, he
consumed pesticide. He was rushed to hospital, where he died the next
day.
Another case of poverty-driven suicide is that of Suganthi (name
changed), the mother of two daughters. Suganthi, 27, was residing at
Kumarananthapuram in Tirupur. A native of Vriddachalam, she married a
garment worker, who had migrated to the hosiery town from the
industrially backward Tiruvannamalai district a few years earlier.
One day, a fight broke out between the couple as they did not have
money to buy milk powder to feed their eight-month-old daughter. Cursing
her fate, she drank malachite green (a dye) mixed in water and ended her
life.
Another example of impulsive behaviour among the garment factory
workers due to lack of counselling, as the police say, is the suicide of
Ilango, a native of Tiruvannamalai, who was staying at
Avinasilingampalayam village, 12 km from Tirupur. He immolated himself
following a quarrel with his wife over the purchase of a new mobile
phone when the family was already reeling under debt. The young widow
has left for her native place not knowing what the future holds for her.
Crime records maintained by the police mention the cause of suicide
or attempts to commit suicide as illness or family problems. But experts
say only a detailed study will bring out the real reasons. For instance,
to a large number of the unemployed who flock to the hosiery town –
which is still a hot destination – from across 20 districts of Tamil
Nadu, it is an ‘out of the frying pan, into the fire’ experience. A lot
of young men and women from several villages in Madurai district,
including Usilampatti, Keeripatti, Pothampatti, Kalyanipatti,
Pannaipatti, Veppampatti, Nalliveeranpatti, Thadayampatti and Athipatti,
have migrated to Tirupur to work in the garment factories. Several
others work in spinning mills, an allied industry, in Dindigul and
Coimbatore districts.
Interaction with a cross-section of the migrants who have returned to
their villages in and around Usilampatti in Madurai district reveals
their bitter experience in the fast-growing industrial town. Originally
farmhands or small peasants, mostly Dalits or members of the most
backward communities, they migrated to Tirupur to earn some money which
they needed badly to clear debts or to meet wedding expenses.
This was necessary for them as agriculture in the rain-fed area was
no longer sustainable and remunerative, Assistant Director of the
Society for Integrated Rural Development, a non-governmental
organization M. Vasudevan said.
The migrants were generally recruited by labour contractors who had
clear instructions from the managements that they should catch them
young. The garment industry by and large does not want to employ persons
above 30 years. Teams from garment units descend on the villages and
present video shows on the facilities available at workplaces and
hostels, and promise good payment.
A resident of Nalliveeranpatti A. Veeran, who went to Tirupur in 1997
to work in the garment factories, returned to his village after eight
years. He said the company paid him no overtime benefits though he
worked long hours.
When he insisted that he be given the benefits for the extra hours he
put in, the management asked him to opt for ‘piece-rate jobs’.
“Only those who are mentally prepared to adjust to the whims and
fancies of the management can survive in the industry,” he said. Neither
he nor his colleagues in the factory where he worked as an expert tailor
has got any statutory benefits such as Employees’ State Insurance or
Provident Fund.
Veeran earned Rs.125 for an eight-hour shift. He had to pay Rs.900
towards rent for a single-room house, Rs.25 for drinking water and Rs.15
for electricity every month.
The Frontline |