Bangladesh garment workers world’s most poorly paid: Survey
June 20th, 2010 - 2:19 pm ICT by IANSDhaka, June 20 (IANS) Bangladesh’s garment sector workers are “the world’s most poorly paid” and their rights are being abused increasingly, an international trade union body has said.
Poor wages and working conditions, and refusal of the factory owners to honour wage agreements are also leading to frequent violence, Vienna-based International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) said in a global survey released here Saturday.
Absence of trade unions is adding to the problem, it said.
At least 100 people were injured and 10 factories and 15 vehicles vandalised Saturday in clashes between the police and apparel workers, rallying for increased wages at Jamgara, Narsinghpur and Nishchintapur of Ashulia in Dhaka.
Most of the injuries were from rubber bullets fired by the police, the New Age reported.
In 2009, six garment workers were killed in attacks by police or company security guards during strikes or protests linked to wage demands.
“Bangladesh is another black spot on the Asian continent in terms of the number of workers murdered for establishing their rights,” the ITUC said.
The government last year announced that it would facilitate establishing trade unions in each garment unit. But the employers and their collectives expressed serious reservations.
Readymade garments and knitwear exports fetch Bangladesh the highest export earnings. They stood at $12 billion in 2009.
The entirely private sector, running partly with foreign investment, employs three million workers, mostly women.
Bangladesh had a national emergency and an army-backed, unelected government in office during 2007-08.
The ITUC report observed that lifting of emergency raised hopes for an improvement in the situation for the Bangladesh trade union movement and better economic conditions for workers, but nothing has changed.
Experts New Age spoke to suggested that the government has to “be strong enough to enforce the labour rights related laws and conventions against the errant garment factory owners”.
Besides working conditions for workers, safety conditions are also poor, leading to accidents.
Hong Kong Garments, a factory located in Dhaka, was gutted in a fire that took place Thursday night.
Protests, road blockades by garment workers and clashes with police take place almost every day in Dhaka and its suburbs like Gazirpur, Savar and Narayanganj over the demand for increasing the minimum wage, Bangladesh Trade Union Centre secretary Wazedul Islam Khan said.
- Bangladesh garment workers continue stir against new wages - Aug 02, 2010
- Industrial workers protest closures in Dhaka - Jun 22, 2010
- EU concerned over garment sector violence in Bangladesh - Jul 06, 2010
- Owners, workers both unhappy over Dhaka's wage fixing - Aug 25, 2010
- 50,000 Bangladesh workers booked for violence - Jun 24, 2010
- Dhaka garment units resume work after security assurance - Jun 23, 2010
- Give fair wage to Bangladesh workers: Parliamentary body - Jun 25, 2010
- 20 hurt as garment workers clash with police in Dhaka - Jun 30, 2010
- Dhaka books 4,000 agitating garment workers - Aug 03, 2010
- Agitating workers set fire to factory in Bangladesh - Jun 29, 2009
- Violence in Dhaka garment sector as government readies wage revision - Jul 26, 2010
- Bangladesh to review wages after industrial violence - Dec 13, 2010
- Three dead, dozens injured in police firing in Bangladesh - Dec 13, 2010
- Zia blames 'foreign hand' for industrial violence - Nov 07, 2009
- Mahasweta writes to Hasina on jailed workers' leader - Jan 01, 2011
Tags: apparel workers, asian continent, bangladesh garment, company security, export earnings, garment sector, garment workers, global survey, international trade union confederation, ituc, labour rights, national emergency, poor wages, rubber bullets, sector workers, trade union confederation, trade unions, wage agreements, wage demands, wages and working conditions