EU 'action' after Rana Plaza collapse
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The European Union voiced strong concern over labour conditions in Bangladesh after a building collapse there killed hundreds of factory workers, and said it was considering action to encourage improvements, including the use of its trade preference system.
Anger has been growing since the illegally built structure collapsed
last week, killing at least 390 people. Hundreds remain unaccounted for
but rescue officials said on Tuesday they had given up hope of finding
any more survivors.
It was the third deadly incident in six
months to raise questions about worker safety and labour conditions in
the poor South Asian country, which relies on garments for 80 percent of
its exports.
Representatives of major international garment
buyers - some facing sharp criticism in home markets for doing too
little to safeguard the mostly female workers making their clothes - met
industry representatives in Dhaka on Monday and agreed to form a joint
panel to put together a new safety plan.
Clothes made in five
factories inside the Rana Plaza building on the outskirts of the
capital, Dhaka, were produced for retailers in Europe and Canada.
Late
on Tuesday, the EU issued a brief statement expressing concern and
suggested it would look at Bangladesh's preferential trade access to the
EU market in considering taking action to encourage better safety
standards and labour conditions.
"The EU is presently considering
appropriate action, including through the Generalised System of
Preferences (GSP) - through which Bangladesh currently receives
duty-free and quota-free access to the EU market under the ‘Everything
But Arms' scheme - in order to incentivise responsible management of
supply chains involving developing countries," said the statement,
issued by EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and Trade
Commissioner Karel de Gucht.
About 3.6 million people work in
Bangladesh's garment industry, making it the world's second-largest
apparel exporter. The bulk of exports - 60 percent - go to Europe.
Ashton
and de Gucht said they were deeply saddened by the "terrible loss of
life", particularly because it followed a fire in the Tazreen Fashion
factory in a Dhaka suburb in November that killed 112 people.
"The
sheer scale of this disaster and the alleged criminality around the
building's construction is finally becoming clear to the world," Ashton
and de Gucht said.
Also on Tuesday, following a private emergency
meeting of Canadian retailers, the Retail Council of Canada said it
would develop a new set of guidelines.
That emergency meeting
brought together retailers including Loblaw, Sears Canada Inc and
Wal-Mart Canada, to discuss how they would deal with the tragedy.
Representatives
of some 45 companies, including Gap Inc, H&M, J.C. Penney, Nike
Inc, Wal-Mart, Britain's Primark, Marks & Spencer and Tesco, and Li
& Fung, also met officials from the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers
and Exporters Association in Dhaka on Monday to discuss safety.
The
Retail Council of Canada, which represents operators of more than
43,000 stores in Canada, said it would work with international
organisations, the Bangladeshi government and others to find ways to
address safety in the Bangladesh garment industry.
Primark and Loblaw have promised to compensate the families of garment workers killed while making their clothes.
AGONISING WAIT
With
no hope left of finding survivors, heavy machinery is being used to
clear concrete and debris from the site in the commercial suburb of
Savar, about 30 km (20 miles) from Dhaka.
It was still an
agonisingly slow process for families waiting for news on loved ones who
worked in the Rana Plaza, which collapsed with about 3,000 people
inside. About 2,500 people have been rescued so far, many of them
injured.
With angry protests continuing daily since Bangladesh's
worst industrial accident, the building's owner was brought before a
court in Dhaka on Monday, where lawyers and protesters chanted "hang
him, hang him".
About 20 people were injured on Tuesday as police
fired teargas, rubber bullets and water cannon to disperse protesters
in Savar calling for the death penalty for the owners of the building
and factories.
Officials in Bangladesh have said the eight-storey
complex had been built on swampy ground without the correct permits,
and more than 3,000 workers entered the building last Wednesday despite
warnings it was structurally unsafe.
Eight people have been
arrested - four factory bosses, two engineers, building owner Mohammed
Sohel Rana and his father, Abdul Khalek. Police are looking for a fifth
factory boss, Spanish citizen David Mayor, although it was unclear
whether he was in Bangladesh at the time of the accident.
The garment industry employs mostly women, some of whom earn as little as $38 a month.
Reference: bdnews24
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