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WSWS : News
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Bangladeshi factory collapse kills more than 70 workers
By Vilani Peiris
19 April 2005
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More than 70 Bangladeshi garment workers died in the collapse
of a nine-storey factory at Palashbari, 32 km northwest of the
capital Dhaka on April 11. Rescue workers are continuing to comb
through the rubble but believe there is little chance of finding
any further survivors. About 100 people were injured in the collapse.
The exact number of people missing is disputed. According to
government officials and company management, 250 employees were
working on the night shift at the Spectrum Garments factory. Workers
and relatives of the victims insist that the figure was closer
to 400. Police have indicated that a boiler explosion may have
caused the collapse.
Many of the survivors had to be hospitalised. One told a television
channel on April 11: I heard a loud sound and saw something
coming towards me at a high speed... I and several of my other
colleagues managed to get out of the factory, but many could not
make it to safety before the building partly caved in and then
the rest just came crumbling down.
Immediately after the collapse, hundreds of anxious relatives,
friends and neighbours rushed to the site and searched for survivors
using their bare hands and crowbars. A small crowd of relatives
and friends is maintaining a round-the-clock vigil. Many of the
bodies were so mutilated that identification was difficult.
Monira was one of a number of people who raised concerns about
the inadequacy of the rescue services. I am unhappy with
the progress of the rescue operation. What would happen if a calamity
like a massive earthquake strikes our country?
Fire brigade official Salim Bhuiyan acknowledged the limitations.
We are not equipped for such a huge operation of this nature;
this is the worst such accident ever, he said.
Authorities complained that narrow roads hampered efforts to
bring in cranes and other rescue equipment to remove large concrete
slabs. But the relatives of victims pointed out that only one
heavy crane owned by a private company had been used to shift
debris.
While a boiler explosion may have triggered the collapse, faulty
construction may have played a significant role. At a press conference
on Sunday, the leaders of several non-government organisations
(NGOs) called for the building plans and approvals to be made
public. The nine-storey building was constructed on marshland
and the access road was narrow. According to Reuters, a Dhaka
Development Authority official said on Monday that the building
had been erected without planning permission.
Shireen Akhter, a leader of womens rights organisation
Karmojibi Nari, said on Sunday: It is not merely an accident,
its a serious crime. She demanded the immediate arrest
of factory owner Shahrier Rahman on charges of criminal negligence.
Rahman, who is related to an influential politician in the ruling
Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), has gone into hiding.
Garment Association president Annisul Haq was quick to deny
that his organisation had any responsibility for checking building
designs and approvals. We only look at compliance of safety
regulations and use of safety provisions and tools, he said.
Haq stated that the families of each victim would be paid up to
100,000 taka ($US1,576). NGO leaders demanded that compensation
of 700,000 taka be paid in accordance with the countrys
labour laws.
Relatives have expressed scepticism about a proposed government
inquiry. Speaking to the media, Saleha Banu said: What will
we do with an inquiry report? My son is gone forever, leaving
behind his wife and children. They will starve. I will starve
as he was the only earning member of the family. Marjina
Begum told Reuters: I am afraid everyone will forget the
Palashbari tragedylike those that happened beforejust
after the cries of the victims stop, and the tears will dry.
Garment sweatshops
While the factory collapse is one of Bangladeshs worst
industrial accidents in recent years, it is by no means isolated.
Over the past decade and a half, the economic restructuring policies
of successive governments have transformed Bangladesh into a major
base for garment manufacturing. In the Ghazipur and Savar districts
surrounding Palashbari, numerous sweatshops have sprung up using
cheap labour to manufacture for the US, European and Japanese
markets.
The garment industry is by far the countrys most important
manufacturer, earning around $5 billion annually and accounting
for about two thirds of all exports. Bangladesh has about 2,500
garment factories employing about 1.8 million workers, about 90
percent of them women. The collapsed Spectrum Garments factory
produced nearly 80,000 items of clothing annually for export,
mainly to the US, Belgium and Germany.
Working conditions, including safety standards, in garment
factories are notoriously bad. According to official figures,
nearly 300 garment workers have been killed and more than 2,500
injured in 22 factory fires since 1990. The toll, however, is
likely to be higher as authorities turn a blind eye to building
and safety regulations and thus have a vested interest in playing
down industrial accidents.
Recent tragedies include a fire in garment factory near Dhaka
in January that killed at least 22 workers. Last May, seven people
died in a stampede following a false fire alarm. In November 2000,
at least 48 workers died and more than 150 were injured when they
were trapped inside a burning factory near Dhaka by a locked fire
exit. Locked exits and a lack of basic, properly functioning fire
safety equipment, including alarms, extinguishers and sprinkler
systems, are common.
Working conditions and pay are poor. A recent Asian-American
Free Labor Institute (AAFLI) study of 143 garment factories in
Bangladesh found that salaries ranged from 300 to 500 taka a month
($7.69 to $12.82), except for sewing machine operators and ironers
who received up to 1,800 taka a month. Working hours were commonly
14 to 16 hours a day. A News Asia website article reported
cases of workers not being paid on time. Child labour is common.
The ending of the Multi-Fibre Agreement this January will only
lead to a further deterioration of conditions in Bangladeshs
garment sweatshops. Under the agreement, Bangladesh, along with
other countries, was guaranteed a quota of garment exports. With
the abolition of the quota system, Bangladeshi producers will
be forced to compete with countries like China and India for export
markets.
While wages in Bangladesh are about half those of China, infrastructure,
transport and the cost of raw materials are also major factors
in determining orders. Government ministers warned last year that
up to 40 percent of the countrys factories could go out
of business with the phasing out of the quota system.
It is not clear if the added pressure of competition directly
contributed to the Palashbari factory collapse. But there is no
doubt that Bangladeshi employers will be trying to cut costs to
survive. Those who will inevitably bear the brunt will be workers
who will be forced to accept lower pay and conditions or face
the loss of their jobs. The already poor safety standards will
also suffer.
Last week Prime Minister Khalida Zia visited Palashbari and
called for an intensification of rescue efforts. She declared
that the government would do everything possible to help
survivors and families of the dead. Her state minister for
home affairs accepted that the factory had been built without
authorisation and ordered an inquiry.
These comments, however, are nothing more than hot air. Confronting
the potential collapse of the countrys main export industry,
Zia and her ministers have no intention of changing the system
of sweatshop production that creates such tragedies.
See Also:
Bangladesh factory
fire kills 48 workers: Locked gates prevented workers escaping
death
[30 November 2000]
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