He says it all: Zafar Sobhan on the fire at Tazreen Fashions Garment
Factory on November 24. http://www.vice.com/read/progress-and-globalization-in-bangladesh-the-tazreen-fashions-garment-factory-fire
Sonntag, 2. Dezember 2012
Donnerstag, 2. August 2012
Is it ethical to buy clothes made in Bangladesh?
Bangladesh is today
the second largest exporter of readymade apparel in the world, trailing only
China. It is also the focus of much critical reporting about poor labor conditions
in its garment factories. However, in Bangladesh
itself there is widespread agreement – among entrepreneurs, government
officials, NGOs, labor activists, development experts – that working conditions
and wages have improved significantly in recent years.
by Marianne Scholte
by Marianne Scholte
We have been
conditioned to shop with a bad conscience. I purchase a shirt at a boutique on
the Ku’damm in Berlin and comment to the saleswoman that it was made in
Bangladesh. Before I can complete my sentence, she sighs and apologizes: “Yes,
the working conditions are so very bad there, but what to do? Everything is
made abroad these days.”
“No, no,” I correct
her, “I lived in Bangladesh. I have been in some of these factories. And I am
pleased to buy something made there.” The saleswoman is astonished. Then I
explain to her that garment factory jobs are the only formal-sector jobs
available to rural young women in Bangladesh, who otherwise are married off at
a very young age.
I explain that
garments are the biggest and most important industrial sector in Bangladesh
today, employing 3.5 million people directly and millions more indirectly. I
explain that the wages are indeed low there, but that this is the reason that
so many firms, including all the major German retailers, source there and thus
create jobs. And that improvements have been made in wages and working
conditions and will continue to be made. The saleswoman thanks me for the
information, apparently pleased to have something positive to say to the next
customer who complains about the labor conditions in Bangladesh.
Earlier this year, Markencheck continued the barrage of
negative reporting about garment factories in Bangladesh with programs on Lidl
and H&M.
To stop buying Bangladeshi garments is not the solution!
Interview with Mr. Syed Sultan Uddin Ahmmed, Assistant Executive Director of the Bangladesh Institute of Labor Studies by Marianne Scholte
The Bangladesh
Institute of Labor Studies was established in 1995 with the support of
the trade union movement and is associated with 14 national trade union
centers. It is the only labor institute in Bangladesh.
Dhaka, 5 February 2012
Dhaka, 5 February 2012
Scholte: There has been a lot of press coverage in
Germany about poor labor conditions in Bangladesh garment factories. In
January, the German TV program Markencheck brought footage of poor Bangladeshi
girls who work in factories that produce for Lidl and H&M and do not make
enough money to live. The H&M program also showed part of an interview with
you, where you say that garment workers need at least 7000 taka (EUR 70) to
cover their basic needs.
Uddin Ahmmed: Yes, I was interviewed, but I did not know that
I appeared in German television.
Scholte: After the show, people started to question
whether they should buy clothes made in Bangladesh. What would be your message
to German consumers?
Uddin Ahmmed: My message would be: buy garments made in
Bangladesh and help rural Bangladeshi girls to be self-reliant and have a
dignified life.
Scholte: How does a German consumer do that? German
consumers want to help the poor girls they saw on the Markencheck television
shows – but they do not know how to help. What can they do?
Uddin Ahmmed: As
Germany is the second largest importer from Bangladesh and number one in
Europe, consumers can put pressure on the buyers to pay a fair price for their
order and ensure that a fair share goes to the worker.
Germany is
a democracy, so German civil society, on behalf of German consumers, should mobilize
the German Government to communicate with our government and insist on measures
to secure international labor standards for the workers. There are government
to government relations in many areas, including technical cooperation support.
Even more
importantly, safeguard the activists who promote the rights of workers. Help them
mobilize and organize workers. The Government of Bangladesh does not allow or
safeguard trade union activities, does not allow mass mobilization or protect
the leaders.
This is
what German consumers can do. To stop buying Bangladesh products is not the
solution. This would make it worse for workers in Bangladesh.
"Garment workers enjoy a better standard of living than the average Bangladeshi."
Interview with Mr. Md. Fazlul Hoque, President of the Bangladesh Employers' Federation by Marianne Scholte
Mr. Hoque
is the owner of two garment factories in Naranganj, with 600 workers each, and
previously served three terms as the President of the Bangladesh Knitwear
Manufacturers and Exporters Association, from April 2004 until July 2010.
Scholte: There was a lot of critical reporting earlier
this year in Germany about labor conditions in Bangladeshi factories. Did you
see it?
Hoque: Yes. I would like to go to Germany to talk to
people who have a bad image of readymade garment producers in Bangladesh. We
can organize seminars, we can invite the media. I would like to face them
directly. Bring your questions and I will answer.
I have good
connections with the employers‘ federation in Germany and I have the
certification of the International Labour Organization (ILO) that Bangladesh is
child-labor free and has relatively good working conditions. You can find it in
the ILO annual report.
In 1996-97
we also had very bad publicity and orders dropped almost 50% because of bad
press on child labor. Then we brought ILO on board and did a project with them.
ILO will certify that we have no child labor today.
Scholte: But wages in Bangladesh are so low. How can
workers live on them?
Hoque: The readymade garment sector is the only industry
in Bangladesh that has a minimum wage: 3000 taka. This is the highest official
entry level in the country. No one else pays this. The entry level is 3000 taka
and the range goes up to 20,000. Workers paid on a piece-rate basis earn more. Most
workers – 60% – earn 6000 to 10,000 takas a month.
The
readymade garment industry is not isolated. You have to consider the overall
economic, social, political situation of Bangladesh. This is not Germany. If
you try and find a problem, you will find ten. I also see many problems in
Germany. There are problems in any country.
If you take
the Bangladesh standard of living earnestly, you will find that the garment
workers enjoy a better standard of living than the average Bangladeshi. The
working environment is one of the best available to workers in Bangladesh. You
cannot take a yardstick from Germany and use it in Bangladesh. You have to
think about the overall socio-economic situation in Bangladesh.
Mittwoch, 1. August 2012
Project Post-1971
Interivew with Mahmuda Haque Choudhury about her life after 1971 as the country's first woman to enter the Foreign Service.http://www.thedailystar.net/forum/2011/march/project_post.htm
Woman on a Mission
Interview with Shafina Lohani about the impact of the Liberation War on the country's women:http://www.thedailystar.net/forum/2011/march/woman_mission.htm
Liberating the Women of 1971
After the War of Liberation, Sheikh Mujibur
Rahman pleaded with his countrymen to "give due honor and dignity to
the women oppressed by the Pakistani army" -- by which
he meant the hundreds of thousands of women who had been raped.
Unfortunately, his pleas went largely unheeded, and countless women were
driven from their homes and marginalised by society. Nevertheless, the
unprecedented, nationwide programme that women leaders and Sheikh
Mujib's government organised to aid war-affected women did effectively
assist thousands of women and created new public space for women to work
and live independently.http://www.thedailystar.net/forum/2011/march/liberating.htm
Justice Denied
Will the war crimes tribunal will bring justice to Bangladeshi women?http://www.thedailystar.net/forum/2010/june/justice.htm
Acid Attacks in Bangladesh A Voice for the Victims
For the better part of a decade, Monira Rahman has fought to
provide treatment, counseling and rehabilitation to the victims of
brutal acid attacks in Bangladesh. Read more:http://www.spiegel.de/international/acid-attacks-in-bangladesh-a-voice-for-the-victims-a-406485.html
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