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WSWS : News
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Lanka
A day in the life of a Sri Lankan tea worker
By Jayanthi Perera
9 December 2005
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Five days after Sri Lankas new government was installed
on November 23, the state-owned Daily News carried a front-page
headline, Urgent action to uplift estate workers.
The article pompously announced that President Mahinda Rajapakse
had instructed Milroy Fernando, the new plantation minister, to
give priority to uplifting the estate sector workers who
have been perennially suffering abject poverty and misery.
A ministerial project report will supposedly detail a
wide range of shortcomings confronting the estate population,
covering health, education, economic conditions, unemployment
among estate youth, drinking water, land erosion, access road
and passenger transport.
This is not the first time that plantation workers have heard
pledges of this kind. Despite numerous past promises to improve
living conditions, the situation facing workers continues to deteriorate.
A World Bank report on Sri Lanka released early this year found
that poverty among plantation workers increased by 50 percent
over the decade from 1991-92 to 2002.
World Socialist Web Site reporters recently visited
the Kurukude division of the Aislaby estate, which is located
near Bandarawela in the central hills, 210 kilometres from Colombo.
The private estate is owned by Malwatte Valley Plantations. Approximately
1,300 workers are employed on the plantation and 50 families live
in the Kurukude division. The terrible conditions faced by workers
on the estate are indicative of those experienced by Sri Lankas
agricultural working class.

The plantation workers live in line rooms, which
are 5 or 6 small adjoining units. Each familys unit measures
just 6 x 4 metres. The dwellings were first built by British colonial
planters for workers brought from South Indiaforebears of
the present plantation workers. With the expansion of workers
families from generation to generation, the tiny units have had
to be partitioned with thin brick walls or polythene to provide
accommodation for married couples. In some cases, two to three
families have to share a single line house.
I am 30 years old and a mother of three children,
one plantation worker told the WSWS. I studied only up to
grade 4. I have one younger brother and two younger sisters. Our
father became ill and died when we were small. Our mother couldnt
afford food and schooling for us, so we were not able to continue
our education. My brother managed to go up to grade 10 only because
my sisters and I started working in the estate when we were 14
and 15. I have been working here for about 15 years now, but have
been unable to save any money.
On a typical day, this worker wakes up at 4.30 in the morning,
in order to report to work at 7.30 a.m. In the morning she is
so busy preparing breakfast for her children, getting them ready
for school and attending her sick mother that she has no time
for her own morning meal.
My eldest child is eight years old and goes to school
with other children in the estate, she continued. She
has to walk more than one and a half kilometres every school day
in the morning and evening. What can I do? We cant afford
to pay for school vans. I drop my two younger children at the
crèche on my way to work. I also have to bring food and
water for them and leave it at the crèche. I provide them
rice with a single curry or roti [bread]. I only can give them
milk in the morning.
Workers who pluck tea leaves begin at 8 a.m. and continue until
4 or 4.30 p.m. Supervisors shout at anyone who takes even a single
minutes break during work hours, and management demands
that each worker reach their harvest target of 18-20 kilograms
of tea leaves per day, irrespective of whether there are enough
tea leaves to pick or not.

At noon we have our lunch break, after handing over our
harvest, the plantation worker said. By 12.15 p.m.
I have usually returned home with my younger children after picking
them up from them crèche. After attending to my children
and eating the lunch I prepared in the morning, I hurry back to
work.
On the way home in the evening we collect firewood for
cooking. It is about 5 to 5.30 p.m. by the time we return. We
have a chance to sit down with our children and have a shared
meal only at night. By the end of the day we feel very tired and
go to sleep at about 9 p.m. to start the same routine the following
day.
There are only three water taps for the 50 families on the
division, and these operate for just 90 minutes each day. Workers
are forced to queue to collect water for their families, and in
the dry season they must go to a nearby village in search of water.
Workers explained that Sinhalese villagers also have a water problem.
Only plantation management staff are supplied with water from
a tanker.
Sanitary facilities are in a terrible state. Two or three families
are forced to share a single toilet, which has no water supply.
A young female worker told the WSWS about the substandard health
facilities on the estate. Because essential medicines are
not available at estate dispensary we have to go to the estate
doctors bungalow, she explained. There is only
Panadol, tablets and a liquid for cleaning wounds in the dispensary.
Education facilities for Tamil-speaking plantation children
are extremely poor. The Bandarawela educational zone requires
about 800 teachers, but only 500 teachers are presently employed.
Most of plantation youth have to abandon their education by grade
6 or 7, and in some cases even before then. No one from the Aislaby
estate school has passed G.C.E. (ordinary level) since 1999.
Youth unemployment is rampant. Young people have lost all hope
of finding work on the estate. Boys have left to find menial jobs
as waiters or helpers in small hotels and shops in surrounding
towns or in Colombo. The girls often have to work as domestic
servants in the cities.
Even for those who find work harvesting tea leaves, wages are
extremely low. As the plantation worker told the WSWS: We
would also like to have a decent life. But my three children,
my mother and I all are maintained by my wage. My husband doesnt
have permanent work and is forced to rely on daily odd jobs. In
the wet season he has difficulty finding work. To find a job in
the town [Bandarawela] he has to spend about 22 rupees on bus
fares to earn a wage of only 150-200 rupees [$US1.50 to $2] a
day. However, Tamils have difficulty finding work.
My wage is mainly spent on settling our monthly debts
at the grocery. We buy on credit, and as the prices go up our
debts go up too. I receive about 3,000-3,500 rupees per month.
I can earn a 1,000 more in seasons with a good harvest. However,
due to a lack of maintenance, the harvests are decreasing. When
we become ill or face other trouble, we become further indebted.
We are not interested in who becomes the president. We
dont have confidence in any leader. I am talking to you
because I have known your party [the Socialist Equality Party]
for a long time and what you said has come true.
There are a number of trade unions on the estates, such as
the Ceylon Workers Congress (CWC), Up Country Peoples Front
(UPF) and Red Flag. They are doing nothing except collecting
our monthly dues, the plantation worker declared contemptuously.
Tamil plantation workers are among the most impoverished and
oppressed layers of the working class. Immediately after independence
in 1948, the government stripped them of their citizenship rights
in an effort to whip up communal divisions between Tamil and Sinhala
workers. A 1963 pact between New Delhi and Colombo saw hundreds
of thousands of people deported to South India. Other Tamil estate
workers have managed to gain citizenship over a number of years,
but they are still treated as second-class citizens.
Plantation workers are burdened with onerous work, paid poverty-level
wages and provided with terrible living facilities. The estate
owners, on the other hand, reap large profits. A recent report
published in the Sri Lankan press highlighted the earnings of
Malwatte Valley Plantations, which owns the Aislaby estate. In
the three months to June 30 this year, the firm recorded a gross
profit of 65 million rupees. In 2004, the companys gross
profit totalled 228 million rupees.
The present government has no intention of altering this system
of exploitation any more than previous ones. President Rajapakses
promises of uplifting plantation workers are just
as empty as those made to other sections of the working class
and rural poor. What will be implemented is the agenda of the
IMF and World Bank, which will further erode the already appalling
living standards facing many workers.
See Also:
New Sri Lankan president confronts same
impasse as predecessor
[2 December 2005]
Sri Lanka: unemployed youth
speak to WSWS
[24 November 2005]
After the Sri Lankan election:
what next for the working class?
[22 November 2005]
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