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NEWSLETTER 14, JULY 2001

Producing Garments in Lesotho

Super-knitting-lesothoIn January 2001 the Centre for Research on Multinational Corporations (SOMO), located in the Netherlands, carried out research on Lesotho's fast-growing garment industry. Researchers visited 10 factories and interviewed management, trade union, and NGO representatives, as well as garment workers. They found appalling labour conditions, including inhumanly low wages, long working days with forced overtime, and trade union repression.

Lesotho is a small landlocked country in Southern Africa and has few natural resources other than water. Most of the country's estimated 2.1 million inhabitants are involved in subsistence agriculture. It is one of the poorest countries in Africa. The International Labour Organization (ILO) estimates that half of the population lives below the poverty line.

In 1967, directly after gaining independence from the United Kingdom, the government established the Lesotho National Development Corporation (LNDC) to promote industrial investment, with the aim of raising the level of employment. The LNDC is the government's main parastatal agency for implementing the country's industrial development policy. In practice, the LNDC provides factory buildings, which are rented out to investors. The LNDC also provides infrastructure, services (for example serviced industrial lands for rent, so companies can build their own factories) and an incentive package for investors.

In recent years Lesotho has built up its manufacturing sector considerably. Major conflicts regarding the election outcomes in 1998 leading to SADC intervention in 1998 has destroyed a large part of the infrastructure in the capital Maseru and has caused a temporary disruption in the growth of the sector. However it seems the manufacturing sector is not too discouraged and the garment sector continues to steadily expand.

tebobo-textiles-lesothoBetween 1973 and 1999 the LNDC has worked with 40 companies that have investments in Lesotho. In the 1970s and 1980s the LNDC facilitated investments by 18 companies, who produced a wide range of products including umbrellas, bricks, auto parts, pharmaceuticals and garments. Most companies came from South Africa, circumventing the apartheid boycotts that existed during those years. In the 1990s investments in Lesotho shifted toward the garment industry: 15 of the 22 companies investing did so in the garment industry and among these there was trend towards Asian investment; 11 of the companies were Taiwanese owned. Most of these garment companies are expanding their factories, mirroring faith in the future possibilities for producing garments in Lesotho.

Most of the Asian companies profit from the export possibilities Lesotho offers in the form of favorable and quota-free entry to the United States and European markets. The Africa Growth and Opportunity Act, set up in 2000, allows for even more possibilities to utilize Lesotho's duty-free and quota-free apparel access to the U.S. market. Most companies come to Lesotho to bypass the quotas that are set in their home countries or the countries where they were previously operating.

Although it seems that trade opportunities draw the garment industry to Lesotho, factory management mentions other reasons for choosing this country. Management representatives that were interviewed mentioned Lesotho's low labour costs for a highly skilled, well educated labour force, the absence of powerful unions, a labor law that favors investors, and a reasonably stable social and political environment.

The race to attract foreign direct investment (FDI) is encouraging the governments in Southern Africa to offer large incentive packages to investors. These packages don't seem to attract foreign investors as much as do the absence of quotas and favorable trade agreements, instead they are perceived by the investors more as the "icing on the cake." However, for the countries offering the incentives the consequences of these packages might make the difference between profiting from FDI or failing to gain any real benefits for the country, losing not only in economic terms but also in human and social terms. As history has proven in Asia, as soon as soon as workers begin to benefit from foreign investment, for example, by negotiating to receive higher wages, the industry will quite easily pack up and leave for a less-complicated or less-demanding locale.

Work places at lee-company-lesothoThere is no export processing zone in Lesotho but in reality the areas where the factoies are located are comprable. Lesotho's garment factories are found in several industrial zones; there are two industrial estates in Maseru and two in Maputso (one of which is already 30 years old) which have their own police station. They are closed fortresses, secured by (sometimes armed) guards. Companies that set up shop in these zones enjoy incentives that include tax reductions and the lax implementation of labor law, although it is still valid.

"We sell our people", said one LNDC representative. "We sell them through their quality, availability, literacy, and competitive wage rate."

The buyers who contract with these garment factories are almost all from the United States. Among the largest buyers in Lesotho are The GAP, K-Mart, and Wal-Mart, companies that allegedly set labour standards for their production through codes of conduct. However, in most factories we found conditions that fell short of all labour standards. Working conditions did not meet the standards included in Lesotho's national labour law or the standards found the codes of conduct of the foreign buyers.

In interviews with 30 garment workers in Lesotho, SOMO researchers learned that the norm in the industry was for long work weeks, forced and often unpaid overtime, repression of trade union rights, violations of health and safety standards, illegal dismissals, and low wages. The following examples of working conditions are taken from discussions that researchers had with workers (note that names have been changed to protect the identity of the workers).

No day off

Researchers found that workers often work seven days per week.

In a normal workweek Ella reported that she has to put in 45 hours of regular work (nine hours per day), and most weeks around 27 hours of overtime (on average 2.5 hours of overtime every weekday and 7.5 on Saturday and 7.5 on Sunday). On weekdays she said that she does not get paid for the hours she works between 5 and 6 p.m. or for the hours she works later. Meanwhile, management says that if workers haven't finished their targets, then they have to work the extra evening hours on weekdays for free.

Forced and sometimes unpaid overtime

Researchers learned that most overtime is compulsory, and that sometimes workers are not paid for these hours. This is in violation of Lesotho's labour law. In reality though, daily overtime to fulfill quotas is often not paid at all.

Muriel reported that workers are required to work through their lunch breaks if they have not been able to make their targets. She said that a lot of the workers couldn't make the target within normal working hours. This means no food or rest until 5 p.m. Most of the time, 15 lines run during the lunch break, each line requiring 29 people to work on it.

The company sets production targets. If these are not reached, the workers have to work unpaid overtime (since they are clocked out at 5 p.m.). Punishments for not achieving the targets can include being clocked out earlier the next day, even though the workers have to remain at work.

Trade unions shut out of factories

Researchers were informed that workers are pressured not to join trade unions. In addition to the intimidation of workers, trade unions are denied access to many factories. Some examples of how workers in Lesotho's garment industry have been denied their right to organize:

  • In 1999 when thousands of workers took part in a procession organized by the trade union, many were fired just for participating.
  • On January 8, 2001 at the end of the day the management of one factory forbade workers to wear trade union caps at the factory. The next day, in the morning it extended its prohibition to all head wear. 11 workers refused to take of their hats and were subsequently sent home.

    Marly reported her factory is not in favor of the union. They warn people not to join the union, because they will fire them for it. She also says people who join the union have a harder time at the factory. They are shouted at and if they are shop stewards they are not allowed to work overtime. This way they do not get a chance to make enough money. When LECAWU (the trade union) members have a meeting with management about problems in the factory, the time they spend with the management is deducted from their salary. In contrast, when the workers' committee (organizations that represent factory workers, in addition to the union) addresses problems, they are paid the hours they spend on negotiations.

    Appalling health and safety violations, including locked exits

    Researchers heard about serious health and safety concerns. They learned that most of the factories keep emergency exits locked with padlocks, creating a grave threat to workers safety (for example, in the event of a fire). In one factory, workers said, they are locked up at night. The main door is locked and they don't know who has the key. In another factory one of the floors where workers sew clothes is always kept padlocked.

    None of the factories have temperature regulation and as a consequence all factories are very hot in summer and very cold in winter. Lesotho is a mountainous country and has a continental climate, which is characterized by extremes in temperatures. It can freeze in the winter and can be very hot in summer. At lunchtime, workers eat their food outside the factory and sit on the ground outside the factory premises, since no factories provide chairs, tables, or any covering to protect them against the elements.

    There is hardly any safety equipment in use in the factories. Sometimes cheap facemasks are provided but the workers perceive them as useless because "particles go right through them."

    Some women reported that pregnant workers are treated badly in the factories. They have to work hard, standing the whole day and doing overtime, said one worker. Most of the women work until their pregnancies reach full term.

    There were numerous other "incidents" reported to the researchers. For example, women workers have to walk home late at night, without the possibility of transport and as a consequence are raped. In another incident a women who sustained a head wound was forbidden to leave the factory premises to see a doctor. Researchers saw workers being beaten and verbally abused by supervisors. The water that is used to wash the jeans is not filtered and the chemicals leave the factory straight into the river.

    Unlawful dismissals

    The workers interviewed claimed that often workers are dismissed without a hearing. There is no one to represent them. People are dismissed for "being slow," for not performing at high quality, but also "for no apparent reasons" sometimes.

    Low salaries

    The salaries paid to garment workers are less than a living wage, and far below a wage needed to provide for basic needs. Salaries are sometimes even below the minimum wage

    Lina said that the wages she earns are not enough to cover needs. She said she works hard. She has to support two children, one husband, her parents, her husband's father. Her children do not go to school, because she cannot afford it. She explained that she would need at least 1000 M to make ends meet - nearly double what she currently makes.

    Eight people live off of Juliette's salary (her parents and five children). She is the sole provider for her family, Juliette explained. Only two of her children are able to attend school. The family lives in one room that is divided by a curtain. What Juliette makes is simply not enough to meet her family's needs.

    Women workers humiliated

    In most of the factories the workers are humiliated and treated badly by management and supervisors.

    When leaving the factory (at breaks and at the end of the day), all workers are searched (in one of the factories the researchers walked down a long line with workers pulling their pants down, shirt up, shoes off; in another factory workers had to take off all their clothes). Women search women. However, often supervisors walk past the line or male workers clock out with the women so that while the women are being searched they must stand undressed in view of the male workers.

    Buyers show no interest in working conditions

    Most of the workers reported that they have seen buyers in the factory. These buyers never talk to the workers, according to those interviewed. The buyers check their production, but nothing else. None of the workers have ever heard about a code of conduct or other buyer's standards.

    Job insecurity

    Researchers found that some factories work with casual workers for years, not providing garment workers with any job security. The workers have to stand in front of the gate, waiting each day to find out if they are needed for work, and will be earning anything for that day.

    Meanwhile, cases of labour rights violations that were brought to Lesotho's labour court are not dealt with or are left pending for years.

    Most who were interviewed mention that a positive part in all this is that the employment rate has risen, something to applaud in a country like Lesotho with a very high level of unemployment. It would be good however to have a look at the long term benefits of the actual investment in Lesotho. Although it is a familiar story it still seems scandalous that trade agreements, allegedly proposed to bring benefits to the world's least developed countries, are in fact resulting few benefits to them and bringing most of the profits to the multinational producing companies from all over the world.

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