Bangladesh garment worker tragedy is ‘mass industrial slaughter’

Since 2005, more than 1,000 textile workers in Bangladesh have died in fires and building collapses. Thousands of people, many of them young women work in appalling and unsafe conditions in factories which supply western countries and High Street stores with cheap clothing.

Since 2005, more than 1,000 textile workers in Bangladesh have died in fires and building collapses. Thousands of people, many of them young women work in appalling and unsafe conditions in factories which supply western countries and High Street stores with cheap clothing.

The collapse of a building housing up to eight factories in Rana Plaza, Dhaka on April 24, with hundreds killed and many workers still missing, is the culmination of neglect, abuse, greed and exploitation by the builders of these sites and the owners of the factories who produce goods for the western market – supplying outlets such as Primark, Matalan and Mango.

The television coverage of the tragedy has been truly shocking. Media reports have shown the use of child labour, a complete disregard for basic health and safety, lax or non-existant building regulations and a disregard for agreements with customers for basic labour standards.

Even when workers at the Rana Plaza factories in Dhaka complained that the building was cracking open, the owners forced them back to work.The owners of the factories and the builders themselves have now been arrested and the owner of the building Sol Rana has been arrested whilst on the run from the authorities.

Cut price clothing for Western consumers

Rana Plaza is one in a long line of tragedies where workers have lost their lives and their loved ones. Last year over 100 workers were burned to death in a fire at the Tazreen Fashions factory.

And now as the world looks on in horror, the media is asking how this happened. How come High Street stores outlets seem oblivious to what has been plain to see for years? Why do the outlets and fashion chains still do business with these companies? The answer is the seemingly insatiable demand for cheap clothing at cut price rates.

The global manufacturing unions federation, IndustriALL, has been running a campaign to support workers in the Bangladesh textile and garment industry for sometime.

The horror at Rana Plaza has been described by IndustriALL as “mass industrial slaughter”.

And yet, trade union membership in this sector in Bangladesh is low and there are a plethora of unions. Jyrki Raina, the general secretary of IndustriALL, says are as many as 39 national garment workers unions in Bangladesh, (many of them backed by NGOs) who do not always co-operate with each other.

Those workers and unions who have stood up and demonstrated against these outrages have faced attacks by the police and security forces. Union officials and organisers face harassment, violence and death.

Putting pressure on the authorities to act

In 2010 Unite and the United Steelworkers in the USA and Canada, through the global Workers Uniting, supported thousands of garment workers in Bangladesh who went on strike in a fight for a pay increase and decent working conditions and warned authorities to stop the brutal attacks on workers.

The pressure is now on High Street outlets and on the Bangladesh government.

IndustriALL/LabourStart have set up a campaign site to ‘Make garment factories in Bangladesh safe‘ which contains a letter to Bangladesh’s prime minister demanding an end to these outrages.

War On Want has begun a national petition aimed at high street outlets and their supporters have begun demonstrating at Primark stores. The Ethical Trading Inititiatve is also demanding that Primark pay compensation to the families of the victims of those killed and injured at Rana Plaza; and Union Solidarity International has highlighted a number of campaigns including:

  • Sign the Change.org petition organised by the National Garment Workers’ Federation in Bangladesh, telling Primark, Matalan and Mango to take responsibility for their supply chains.

As IndustriALL general secretary Jyrki Raina says:

“This terrible tragedy highlights the urgency of putting a stop to the race to the bottom in supplying cheap means of production to international brands, a race in which hundreds of workers have lost their lives. Global clothing brands and retailers have a responsibility for their full production chains. Now it is time for them, suppliers and the Bangladeshi government to sit down with IndustriALL and its affiliates to agree on a safety programme that will ensure this will never happen again.”

3 Responses to “Bangladesh garment worker tragedy is ‘mass industrial slaughter’”

  1. Cole

    You do wonder why many of these clothing retailers don’t do proper due diligence of their suppliers. It wouldn’t be that difficult if they could be bothered, and is generally done by the more responsible retailers.

  2. SadButMadLad

    Why is it the fault of the retailers? How far back down the purchasing chain should the retailer go. Should the end customer (you and me) look at every step in the chain.

    Yes, they do need to buy from good companies that look after their workers. Because that means that they get a consistent product and the company will last so meaning that the retailer doesn’t need to waste money finding new companies every other month.

    But do they need to ensure that the company they use is following local laws? I say no. That is the responsibility of the authorities in that country. If the workers were forced to go back to work in a dangerous building it means that the police in that country were not trusted to look after the public. The police were probably corrupt. The same with the authorities that should be checking that the building met regulations. They were probably corrupt as well in skipping over the necessary checks. These are the people you should be attacking, not the retailers in this country.

    Do you think it fair that people in another country might demand that we treat our workers like they theirs? It works both ways. This interfering has all trappings of imperialism, something that I thought the left had managed to stop.

  3. David Lindsay

    Not only is Britain’s only remaining clothing factory in Weatherfield, while the garments worn in the real world are produced in the sweatshops of places like Bangladesh.

    But for decades now, this island standing on centuries’ worth of coal has instead been importing that fuel, in such quantities as to have provided over half of the power during the recent, if concluded, harsh winter.

    Imported it from, among other things, child and slave labour in South America. Anything, anything at all, to break the miners at home.

    These matters are now being discussed in earnest. Let that discussion range far and wide.

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