‘I’ll never ask my son to work again’ - children risk severe injury in Myanmar’s factories as families drown in debt

Getting justice when factory owners put children in harm’s way is extremely difficult, says lawyer 

12-year old Mg Chit Min Htwe who still wants to work to support his family even though he lost 3 fingers (Photo by Kay Zun Nwe/ Myanmar Now)

Twelve-year-old Chit Min Htwe couldn’t stand to see his parents struggling in debt, so he left school to work in a factory in Yangon’s Shwe Lin Ban industrial zone.

A month after starting his new job late last year he got his hand trapped in a machine, mangling it so badly that he lost three fingers.

During a recent visit by Myanmar Now to the simple hut where he lives in a squatter community with his parents and younger brother, Chit Min Htwe was lying under a mosquito net.

He used to do his homework around this time, now he stares despondently at his bandaged hand. He spent two months in hospital after surgeons managed to reattach his thumb and forefinger.

 

 

“I thought things would be alright if all three of us worked,” he told Myanmar Now. But the accident put an end to his hopes of helping his parents out of debt.

“I didn’t even save any money, everything I earned had to go the debt collector,” he said.  

 

 

An estimated 600,000 child laborers in Myanmar are involved in hazardous work, according to figures from the International Labour Organization (ILO).

For children like Chit Min Htwe the risks of ending up in a dangerous job are even higher; families in debt are more likely to have a child in work than those who are debt-free, a 2015 ILO survey found.

Thirteen-hour days

Chit Min Htwe’s parents make a meagre living selling traditional snacks around the industrial zone off the back of a bicycle.

Before the boy started his job, debt collectors visited their home frequently, often shortly after he arrived home from school while his parents were out working.

Then one day he got a visit from a man from the locally-owned Four Ocean factory, which supplies heavy duty bags used to pack things like rice and sand.

The man offered him a job working 13-hour days from 6.30am each morning, and said he could earn up to 200,000 kyats a month.

His parents didn’t like the idea of him working at first, he said, but he insisted.  

His main duty was to pack glue pellets, which are used to seal industrial packaging, into bags. Sometimes he had to feed old bags into a plastic melting machine.

It was this contraption that would take his fingers.

“I will never ask my son to work again,” said Win Oo, his father.

When he approached the factory after the accident, a representative told him the family could “do whatever we liked and complain to whoever we liked,” said Win Oo.

“It hurts me so badly that they responded like this when my son was injured so badly,” he said.

‘The interest has increased’

The factory did give the family just over 900,000 kyats, just under $600, for expenses related to his stay in hospital. But that didn’t cover everything, which came to around 1.7 million kyats, said Daw Nilar, the boy’s mother.

The cost drove the couple even further into debt, she added. “We had to borrow money with interest from people around the neighborhood… now the interest has increased,” she said.

The factory’s owner, Yan Kyu Peng, was fined 2.5 million kyat last month.

That money will go to the government; the family are still seeking compensation.

And the owner avoided a potential three month prison sentence under a 1951 factories law.

In fact there is no record of any factory owner receiving a jail term under the law, said U Htay a labour rights lawyer.

Senior staff members at Four Ocean declined Myanmar’s Now request for an interview during a recent visit to the factory.

Dust, fumes, chemicals

An official from the Ministry of Labour, who requested anonymity, said child labour was almost ubiquitous in Myanmar’s industrial sector.

“Since this is happening in almost every factory, we need to watch out all the time,” he told Myanmar Now.

Myanmar has 1.1 million child labourers, more than half of whom are exposed to dangers from dust, harmful fumes, machinery, extreme temperatures and chemicals. 

Under the 1951 labour law, child laborers from 14-16 years old are allowed to work under certain conditions, while those under 14 are forbidden to join the workforce.

The government does not record data on the number of children injured by accidents at work.

But Prof. Dr Khin Maung Myint, of the orthopaedics department at Yangon General Hospital says child labourers are frequently admitted there.

Around three quarter of the accidents in industrial zones involve injuries to the hands, the doctor said.

‘Who will employ me now?’

The number of children under 14 working at factories or tea shops has drastically increased in recent years, said U Htay, who served for three years at the Labour Arbitration Council.

Not only do most factories routinely flout the law, he added, but opening a case against them is difficult because the police can only act on the advice of the Ministry of Labour.

“It is very difficult for the workers to open a case at the police station. They just don’t accept the complaint,” he said.

While conditions and pay are bad, most parents are grateful for the opportunity for their children to work, said U Win Maung, a regional member of parliament for Hlaing Tharyar.

“If those children can’t get jobs at a factory, then they become street kids who collect garbage,” he said.

Children are among 150,000 people who work in Hlaing Thayar’s industrial zone, according to a recent survey, said Win Maung.

Chit Min Htwe may have suffered a horrific experience, but he still wants to support his parents.  

“My father told me not to work again, he asked me to enter the monkhood,” he said. “I want to work but who is going to employ me now?” he added, glancing at his white bandages.

He has no ambitions to become a captain or an engineer, like other children, he said, but he wants to get his family out of this squatting community.

“When I grow up, I want to get my mother and father out of this ward. There are plots in Shwe Pyi Thar,” he said, referring to another industrial area of Yangon.

“I will buy a plot for my mother to live there.”

The family of Maung Htay, 55, were not allowed a close look at his body before it was cremated 

Published on Aug 10, 2021
Myingyan residents protest against the coup regime in March

A man who was jailed on suspicion of hosting resistance fighters in his home in Mandalay Region has died after a month in detention, his daughter told Myanmar Now. 

Maung Htay, 55, from Kywe Chan village, passed away in Myingyan prison. Authorities told his family he died of heart problems, and later claimed he also had Covid-19, but the family say they don’t trust this explanation and were not allowed a close look at his body. 

The prison notified the family about his death on Monday morning, said the daughter, who asked not to be named. When they arrived at the prison, they were only allowed to see his body from outside the morgue; officials said they could not go inside because of the risk posed by Covid-19. 

But the family saw doctors and prison officers enter the morgue without any personal protective equipment, the daughter added.

“They could have notified us of his condition early on,” the daughter said. “I told them he wouldn’t have had to die if he had been hospitalised early. We saw with our own eyes that no one was wearing PPE.”

The family asked to be able to bring the body back to his village for a funeral, but prison officers refused, again citing the pandemic. Officials then cremated Maung Htay’s body at the Suu Chan Kone cemetery at around 3pm the same day, before the family was able to get a closer look at the body. 

While it was true that Maung Htay had a heart condition, the daughter said, it was manageable and he was successfully treating it with medication before his arrest. 

“Dad was on some medication for his heart but it was not full-blown heart disease. He didn’t get to see a doctor after they arrested him,” she said. 

Maung Htay was detained on July 10 and the family had no contact with him after that and received no updates about his health. 

“They should have notified us or even let him get treatment if he was sick. He didn’t deserve to die,” the daughter said, crying. 

Maung Htay made his living breeding fish and leaves behind his wife, four adult children and a daughter in grade 11.

He spent six days at an interrogation center before he was sent to prison. Although he was arrested after being accused of harbouring People’s Defence Force (PDF) fighters, he was charged with incitement under section 505A, according to his lawyer.

He was among around 80 Myingyan residents arrested by the junta in July, according to the Myingyan Public Movement Committee, a local anti-junta group. 

Myingyan has been relatively calm compared to other areas of the country. There has been no fighting between the PDF and junta forces, and no killings of junta targets by guerilla groups. 

But the military has nonetheless launched numerous raids on villages in the township, forcing many to flee, according to locals. 

Moe Zaw, from Sone Ywar Kone village in Myingyan, died in late July, also after about a month in detention, according to his family.  

He died at the Myingyan Public Hospital from injuries sustained during interrogation at Mandalay Palace, the family said. 

“It’s not just in Myingyan or Insein. The healthcare in every prison all over the country is substandard,” said an official from the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, who asked not to be named. “One might say they rigged the system that way so that people would die faster.”

The group says at least 36 people have been tortured to death in custody since the coup in February. 

Myanmar Now could not reach a junta spokesperson for comment. 

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

Continue Reading

An urban guerrilla group claimed responsibility for three blasts, but not for the attack on the Young Men’s Buddhist Association

Published on Aug 10, 2021

Several explosions, including one targeting the office of the Young Men's Buddhist Association (YMBA), were reported in downtown Yangon on Tuesday afternoon.

On social media, the YMBA said that someone threw a handmade grenade at its office in Pazundaung Township at around 1:45pm. No one was injured in the attack, it added.

A local resident who spoke to Myanmar Now confirmed that there had been a loud explosion near the office at around that time. No further details were available at the time of reporting.

About 15 minutes later, local residents said they heard two more explosions near the intersection of Bogyoke Aung San Road and 51st Street, a short distance away from the first blast.

A group calling itself the Urban Guerrilla Revolution Force (UGRF) claimed responsibility for the second attack, along with two others on the same day.  

A member of the group said that it had planted a total of five handmade bombs in downtown Yangon on Tuesday—two near a police station at the corner of Bogyoke Aung San Road and 51st Street, two near a traffic police office at the corner of Bo Aung Kyaw Road and Strand Road, and one more at the advertising office of a state-run newspaper on 50th Street.

Myanmar Now was unable to independently verify the group’s claims about blasts at the latter two locations.

According to a local vendor, police had blocked roads in Pazundaung, Kyauktada, and Botahtaung townships following the blasts and were questioning pedestrians.

The UGRF, which has vowed to overthrow the junta, has claimed responsibility for a series of bombings over the past two months.

Its targets have included a condominium project and other businesses owned by a civilian member of the ruling military council and several companies linked to the military, including telecoms provider Mytel and Music Zone KTV.

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

Continue Reading

Prison officials have denied hurting inmates or putting them in isolation, but have vowed to punish the protesters 

Published on Aug 10, 2021
Residents near Mandalay’s Obo prison heard protest chants followed by gunshots on Sunday

Authorities at Mandalay’s Obo prison say they will punish inmates who staged a protest there on the 33rd anniversary of the 1988 democratic uprising, amid reports that the ensuing crackdown involved gunshots and protesters were beaten and put in solitary confinement. 

Chan Aye Kyaw, deputy director of the prisons department, told RFA that around 30-40 inmates started chanting slogans and singing songs at 9pm on Sunday and the protest lasted for roughly five minutes. 

He rejected reports that the protesters had been injured and put in isolation. “We are trying to find out who was involved in the shouting and singing, that’s all,” he told the broadcaster. Prison authorities did not answer calls from Myanmar Now seeking comment. 

Prison officials appear to have tried to drown out the protest by playing Buddhist sermons on CDs through loudspeakers. 

“We heard them chanting at around 9pm,” said a man who lives near the prison, speaking on condition of anonymity. “Then the sound of Dhamma CDs came shortly after. Then there were two gunshots. It lasted for around 30 minutes. It all stopped after 9.30pm.” 

On July 23, inmates at Yangon’s Insein prison staged a protest to demand better protection from surging Covid-19 infections, raising fears of a violent crackdown. It is believed that the virus is running rampant through Myanmar’s crowded prisons. 

A doctor detained for opposing the junta died on Sunday after contracting Covid-19 in detention and being denied proper treatment, according to a colleague of his.  

An officer from the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, who asked not to be named, told Myanmar Now the junta was committing severe human rights abuses against prisoners, many of which went unreported. 

“The military council is known for always keeping civilians in the dark so that they can get away with their abuses of power,” he said. “If they were doing things lawfully, they’d have no reason to block out all the media.”

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

Continue Reading