“I don’t dare think about tomorrow,” she said.

Loan, from the southern province of Vinh Long, started working for a plant in Tra Noc Industrial Zone in Can Tho City a few years ago. She, like many other workers in the industrial zone, rented a simple room in Residential Group No 2, Tra Noc Ward, Binh Thuy District.

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Unemployed for more than two months due to social distancing, migrant worker Trinh Thi Ngoc Loan in Can Tho City is struggling to make ends meet. VNA/VNS Photo Thu Hien

Having been laid off for more than two months since Can Tho City implemented a social distancing order under Directive 16, Loan is staying in the city, waiting for the day she can return to work.

“If I return to my hometown, I have to spend 14 days in a concentrated quarantine area and another 14 days when I back to Can Tho,” she said, adding that she even did not know if she would have meals in the following days.

“If my company re-opens when I’m at the concentrated quarantine area, I will not have my job anymore.

“Staying in the city at this time causes many difficulties for migrant workers like me. Now, I’m here with no job, no salary and don’t know when I can go back to work.”

Another migrant worker from Vinh Long Province working in Tra Noc Industrial Zone, Le Thanh Tan, said that before social distancing he had worked for a seafood processing company for more than a month.

Without income for more than two months, Tan and his wife only survive thanks to donated food.

“We have little food left while no one knows how long the COVID-19 pandemic will last. We have to use the food as economically as possible,” Tan said.

“A new school year is set to start, I now have no money to buy new books and notebooks for my children.

“Whenever my children phone me, they ask me when I will return home or when I will send them money to buy new books.

“I’m afraid of such questions. I try not to cry in front of them.” 

Phung Phu Hon, a migrant worker from Soc Trang Province, said that he was laid-off for more than two months without getting any support from his company.

He and his neighbours, most of whom are unemployed, were not instructed to apply for any support offered by the Government and local authorities.

“We all now want to go back to work mostly,” Hon said.

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Migrant workers in Can Tho City's Binh Thuy District hope to return to work. They have had to stay at home for more than two months due to social distancing. VNA/VNS Photo Thu Hien 

Hoang Van Lung, a landlord, said that on seeing the difficulties of the workers during the pandemic, he offered them free rent for a month. Those who can not afford rent now can pay him later.

Lung also called on his friends to donate rice, vegetables and fish sauce for the needy workers.

Nguyen Ngoc Bich, a tenant, said that in her neighbourhood dozens of workers were struggling to lead regular lives due to the pandemic.

“Now more than ever we should care and share,” Bich said.

Preparing some food to celebrate the 15th day of lunar July, Bich and her daughter divided the food into small parcels and then gave them to neighbours.

As of August 27, a total of 1,031 out of 1,090 companies in Can Tho Province have suspended operation due to the pandemic, forcing 65,872 workers to lose their jobs.

A total of 157 companies out of a total of 170 companies in industrial and processing zones suspended operation, making nearly 40,000 workers jobless.

According to the province’s Labour, Invalid and Social Affairs, only 451 laid-off workers in five districts of Binh Thuy, Ninh Kieu, O Mon, Co Do and Vinh Thanh received financial support worth, VND1.5 billion (US$ 66,000).

Can Tho City’s Trade Union reported that about 7,000 workers heavily affected by the pandemic have not received any support under the Government’s Resolution No 68 dated early July on policies to support employees and employers facing difficulties due to the pandemic, worth a total of VND26 trillion (US$1.13 billion).

Source: Vietnam News

Migrant workers say they need food and accommodations

Migrant workers say they need food and accommodations

After registering to take a train to return to her hometown, Thuong and her family members are still waiting for their turn. Her son has also tested positive for the coronavirus.