Why are H&M clothing stitchers fainting in Cambodia?





Mass fainting at King Fashion garment factory (Photo: The Phnom Penh Post)



Mystery surrounds mass fainting at two different Cambodian garment factories



August 30, 2011

Patrick Winn

Global Post




Poor ventiliation? Malnutrition? Or a bizarre "psychological phenomnenon" that only affects Cambodian factory workers?






All have been blamed for a rash of mass faintings in two different garment factories that supply H&M stores with cheap and chic clothing.






Last week, 200 garment workers
keeled over inside a provincial Cambodian factory, according to Radio
Free Asia. Days before, nearly 100 passed out. At an entirely different
factory in the capital, Phnom Penh, another 40 fainted, reports the
Phnom Penh Post.








All factories are operated by
M&V International Manufacturing, which stitches clothing for
H&M. Asked by the Phnom Penh Post to explain the faintings, an
executive reportedly said the fainting is a "strange psychological
phenomenon... In China, this kind of thing is unthinkable."






Others have a more direct explanation: malnutrition paired with stuffy conditions inside the factories.






Several laborers complained to
Radio Free Asia of "hot and smelly" factory conditions. And a labor
leader speaking to the Phnom Post said the wage of 30 cents per day,
insufficient meals and expectations of overtime conspire to leave
workers feeling faint.






"They don’t get enough sleep and they don’t get enough to eat so they are susceptible to fainting,” he said.






H&M and the International Labor Organization, along with the Cambodian government, are still investigating.

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