Google – AFP, Shafiqul Alam (AFP), 8 July 2013
![]() |
Bangladeshi
labourers work in a small garments factory on the outskirts
of Dhaka, on May
29, 2013 (AFP, Munir Uz Zaman)
|
DHAKA —
Seventy top retailers have pledged to improve worker safety and allow
inspection of all of their garment factories in Bangladesh within nine months
under a pact signed with unions after a deadly factory collapse, a statement
said Monday.
Repairs and
renovations resulting from the inspections will also be carried out, the
retailers pledged as part of the legally binding agreement signed in the wake
of the April collapse of the Rana Plaza complex, which killed 1,129 people.
"Initial
inspections at every factory will be completed at the latest within nine
months, and plans for renovations and repairs put in place where necessary,"
a statement from the pact's steering committee said.
![]() |
Relatives
of Bangladeshi workers who lost
their lives in a garment factory disaster,
protest in Savar, on June 29, 2013 (AFP/
File, Munir Uz Zaman)
|
A
headquarters to oversee implementation of the pact will be set up in the
Netherlands and inspectors will aim to "identify grave hazards and the
need for urgent repairs," according to the statement, giving details of
the pact.
The deal
requires top retailers to underwrite renovations and make a two-year commitment
to the factories where renovations will be undertaken.
Labour
umbrella groups, including Swiss-based IndustriALL, stepped up pressure on
retailers to sign the agreement after the nine-storey building crumbled on
April 24, causing one of the world's worst industrial disasters.
"Our
mission is clear: to ensure the safety of all workers in the Bangladesh garment
industry," said Jyrki Raina, general secretary of IndustriALL.
The task of
inspecting and improving factories could prove hugely daunting. A survey by a
prestigious Dhaka-based engineering university last week found nine out of 10
Bangladeshi garment plants are risky structures, and many were built without
qualified engineers.
The
Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA), which
represents 4,500 garment factories, initially welcomed the accord, saying it
reflected the retailers' long term commitment to the country.
![]() |
Bangladeshi
labourers work in a small
garment factory on the outskirts of Dhaka,
on May 29,
2013 (AFP/File, Munir Uz
Zaman)
|
"They
should have definitely included the BGMEA and the knitwear manufacturers in the
accord and its decision-making bodies. After all, it's our factories they are
going to inspect," BGMEA vice-president Reaz-Bin-Mahmood told AFP.
Scott Nova,
head of the US-based Worker Rights Consortium, told AFP the BGMEA was not
included because "this agreement is focused on the responsibility of the
brands to ensure that factories are made safe".
While
leading European retailers have joined the agreement, American brands such as
Walmart and Gap have snubbed the accord and opted for self-regulation.
Walmart,
the world's largest retailer and one of Dhaka's top buyers, has promised to
inspect its Bangladeshi suppliers and publish the results, while Gap says it
launched its own drive last October.



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