Tell Bangladesh to stop its attack on garment workers

Links:

UFCW Canada’s National President presents findings from Bangladesh mission to CLC Convention
UFCW Canada – May 8, 2014

Time for Walmart to sign the Bangladesh Accord
UFCW Canada – May 1, 2014

UFCW Canada stands in solidarity with workers at Rana Plaza first anniversary demonstration
UFCW Canada – April 24, 2014

Rana Plaza survivors get first compensation payments
Toronto Star – April 24, 2014

UFCW Canada embarks on fact-finding mission to Bangladesh
UFCW Canada – April 23, 2014

The victims of the Rana Plaza factory collapse in Bangladesh, one year later
The Globe and Mail – April 23, 2014

Bangladesh: One year after Rana Plaza collapse, serious risks remain
The Globe and Mail – April 23, 2014

A year after Rana Plaza collapse, consumers demand more accountability
Toronto Star – April 21, 2014

Loblaw signs Bangladesh Accord
UFCW Canada – May 15, 2013

UFCW’s International President on H&M and other companies signing Bangladesh Accord
UFCW Canada – May 14, 2013

UFCW Canada mobilizes support for victims of Rana Plaza tragedy
UFCW Canada – May 3, 2013

Toronto – January 20, 2017 – Four years after the Rana Plaza tragedy in Bangladesh, in which more than 1,100 textile workers were killed on the job when the garment factory they were working in collapsed, the government of Bangladesh is still ignoring agreements made after the tragedy to establish workplace safety, and has now allowed a brutal crackdown on garment union activists.

Bangladeshi security forces have raided the houses of trade union leaders and volunteers, and at least 11 garment union leaders and activists have been detained in an alarming step backwards for worker rights and democracy in the country.

Trade union offices in Ashulia, the garment-producing hub of the capital Dhaka, have been invaded, vandalized, and forcibly shut down, with membership documents burned and furniture removed. In addition, after garment workers demanded an increase in wages in December 2016, more than 1,600 workers have been fired and police have filed cases against 600 workers and trade union leaders.

A recent report, authored by Uni Global Union, IndustriALL Global Union, and the International Trade Union Confederation, has also concluded that the Bangladesh government has failed to comply with the Sustainability Compact – an agreement between Bangladesh and the European Union (EU), Canada, and the United States, as well as trade unions and other organizations. The agreement was signed in the wake of the Rana Plaza factory collapse, and called for improvements to workplace safety backed up by worker unions and collective agreements.

But ever since the compact was signed, there have been over 100 cases of anti-union reprisals in factories, and delays by the government to certify additional bargaining units.

It is time for the government of Bangladesh to honour its labour and safety promises by immediately releasing the detained union leaders and activists, and complying with the terms of the Sustainability Compact as quickly as possible.