Google – AFP, 4 November 2013
![]() |
Bangladeshi
garment workers shout slogans during a protest demanding
wage increases in
Dhaka, on November 4, 2013 (AFP, Munir Uz Zaman)
|
Dhaka — An
official Bangladeshi panel voted Monday to raise the minimum wage for garment
workers by 76 percent to $67, still the lowest in the world and well short of
what unions wanted.
The board
of government officials, garment manufacturers and union leaders recommended
wages rise from 3,000 taka ($38) a month to 5,300 taka ($67) for the nation's
four million garment workers in the wake of a factory complex collapse that
killed 1,135 people.
The
collapse of the Rana Plaza factory complex in April, one of the world's worst
industrial disasters, focused global attention like never before on the
industry's appalling pay and conditions.
"The
wage board has recommended 5,300 taka as the minimum wage of the garment
workers," Minimum Wage Board head A.K. Roy told reporters after its
meeting in Dhaka.
![]() |
Bangladeshi
garment workers shout slogans
during a protest demanding wage increases
in Dhaka, on November 4, 2013 (AFP,
Munir Uz Zaman)
|
Owner
representative Arshad Jamal Dipu warned of dire consequences for Bangladesh's
$22 billion industry, the world's second largest after China, if the figure was
introduced.
"It's
an emotional decision devoid of reality," Dipu told AFP.
"It'll
erode our competitive advantage," Dipu added.
Although
the government must still accept the figure before it becomes law, authorities
have adopted the board's recommendation at its past two reviews in 2006 and
2010.
The
government pledged to raise wages by November, based on the board's
recommendation, after strikes in September saw tens of thousands of workers
take to the streets, torch factories and clash with police to demand an
increase.
Protests
over poor wages, benefits and working conditions are frequent in Bangladesh but
have gained in intensity since the collapse of the Rana Plaza complex where
workers stitched clothes for top Western retailers.
Union
leader Sirajul Islam Rony said the rise was still the lowest for the sector
worldwide, and below the 8,114 taka ($102) unions had been demanding to ensure
decent living standards and to keep up with inflation.
![]() |
Bangladeshi
rescue workers look on at
the scene following a blaze that engulfed
a garment
factory in Sripur on October 9,
2013 (AFP/File)
|
"We've
demanded more. But after considering every aspect, we think this is a fair
deal," he said.
Dipu said
owners would struggle to pay the new wage, at a time when large amounts of
money were being spent fixing fire and other safety problems at factories in
the wake of the Rana Plaza and other disasters.
In a series
of meetings in recent weeks, the board had been deadlocked over a final figure
with manufacturers saying they could only afford to double wages to 4,500 taka
($56).
Strikes
over pay have hit the industry in recent months, with production at more than
500 factories -- where clothes are made for retailers such as Tesco and H&M
-- suspended for days, costing some $40 million.
Several
hundred garment workers from two left leaning unions protested outside the
venue for the board's meeting in central Dhaka to reject the final figure as
too low.
Union
leader Montu Ghosh told AFP that workers would launch another round of protests
over the decision.
"We
refused this proposed 5,300 taka minimum wage. We'll call all-out protests
until our original demand is met," he said.
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