DHAKA BANGLADESH — In the aftermath of a
building collapse that killed more than 500 people, Bangladesh's garment
manufacturers might face a choice of reform or perish. Home to five
factories that supplied clothing to retailers in Europe and the United
States, the shoddily constructed building's collapse has put a focus on
the high human price paid when Bangladeshi government ineptitude,
Western consumer apathy and global retailing's drive for the lowest cost
of production intersect.
The eight-story Rana Plaza building
collapsed nine days ago, sparking desperate rescue efforts, a national
outpouring of grief and violent street protests. The tragedy followed
the deaths of 112 people five months ago in a blaze that swept through
the Tazreen Fashions garment factory in Dhaka and the death of seven in a
January blaze.
With three disasters in quick succession,
Bangladesh's $20 billion garment industry fears that a backlash has been
set in motion that threatens fortunes and livelihoods in a business
that employs more than 3 million people and accounts for about 80
percent of the impoverished country's exports.
"It's a crucial
time for us," said Atiqul Islam, president of the Bangladesh Garment
Manufacturers and Exporters Association. "We are doing our best to
improve the safety measures in the factories. We expect our buyers to
bear with us."
The most potent warning so far has come from the
European Union, which said it could restrict Bangladesh's access to the
crucial EU market if it fails to immediately take steps to ensure that
basic labor standards are enforced. Bangladesh is a member of Europe's
"Everything But Arms" program for the world's poorest nations that
exempts it from quotas and tariffs on all exports to the 27-nation EU
except armaments. The EU is Bangladesh's single biggest market with
exports of 8 billion euros in 2011.
The United States is also
reviewing Bangladesh's preferential trade status, a lengthy process that
gained urgency after the killing last year of a Bangladeshi labor
rights organizer who had campaigned for years to improve factory safety.
Garments are not included in the American trade preferences for
Bangladesh but loss of its special market access would further taint its
reputation in the U.S.
As a U.S. decision nears, the building collapse gives additional
momentum to members of Congress who wrote to Bangladeshi Prime Minister
Shiekh Hasina to protest a climate of fear created by the killing of
Aminul Islam, the labor organizer, and lobbied then-U.S. Trade
Representative Ron Kirk to speed up a review of Bangladesh's trade
access after the Tazreen fire.
The Bangladeshi garment association
met earlier this week with representatives of 40 garment buyers
including H&M, JC Penny, Gap, Nike, Li & Fung and Tesco. It said
the companies have doubts about whether the industry can meet their
production deadlines.
The Bangladesh government, however, may be
the least willing of all to accept any responsibility. "I am not
worried," said Finance Minister Abul Maal Abdul Muhith on Friday. "These
are individual cases of ... accidents. It happens everywhere."
By Farid Hossain and Stephen Wright
The Associated Press
Read more:denverpost.com
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