Archive of South Asia Citizens Wire | feeds from sacw.net | @sacw
Home > South Asia Labour Activists Library > Malik-speak: demonisation and denial

Living Wages For Garment Workers

Malik-speak: demonisation and denial

by Rahnuma Ahmed, 17 January 2011

print version of this article print version

New Age (Bangladesh), Editorial

I DON’T think anyone gets taken in by what they say. No, not any longer. Not unexpected, for, after all, how long can one spin the same old story and I DON’T think anyone gets taken in by what they say. No, not any longer.

Not unexpected, for, after all, how long can one spin the same old story and expect people to fall for it? Day after day. Year after year.

Even prime minister Sheikh Hasina had sounded exasperated. Factory owners, she said, give garment workers ’not only insufficient but also inhuman’ wages.

Coming from someone who heads a government which, as Shahidullah Chowdhury, president, Bangladesh Trade Union Centre, points out, is ’essentially biased’ towards protecting and promoting the interests of the rich (like all previous governments in Bangladesh), her comment is quite revealing.

Industry leaders, of course, had a fit. Labour unions had demanded 5-6,000 taka, owners grudgingly agreed to 3,000 taka. Far below living wages. But as Annisul Huq, former head of the BGMEA (Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association), a factory owner whose clients include H&M and Wal-Mart, ruefully told the New York Times, ’If it’s 5,000 taka, I would close all my factories.’ He added, ’Even if it’s 3,000 taka, lots of factories will close within three or four months’ (July 16, 2010).

One cannot, of course, deny that the government needs to take measures to strengthen Bangladesh’s most successful manufacturing industry which accounts for 80 per cent of annual export earnings. For one, it needs to ensure uninterrupted power supply. Abdus Salam Murshedy, the head of BGMEA, in an attempt to convince workers to accept 1,969 taka as wages said last June, ’We have been reeling under acute gas and power crisis, which has affected our productivity.’

Second, it also needs to takes measures to bring down escalating food prices, as food inflation matters most to minimum wage garment workers. In May last year, rice prices went up by between 18 per cent and 32 per cent, according to the Trading Corporation of Bangladesh. But in defiance of Bangladesh labour laws which dictate that wages should be reassessed and adjusted every three years, recent wage increases were awarded after 2006. After spilling blood. They have been dubbed ’malnutrition’ wages by some, ’poverty’ wages by others.

The acute shortage of electricity, insists BD Rahmatullah, former director general of the Power Cell (ministry of power, energy and mineral resources), is a ’manufactured’ crisis. As a former insider, he should know; further, no one from the energy ministry has contested his allegation. One cannot help but ask, why would a government electorally committed to increasing and stabilising power generation, manufacture a crisis, much to the detriment of people’s, and industrial interests? WikiLeaks leaked Dhaka US Embassy cables incline me to suggest that the manufactured crisis is possibly aimed at rallying public support for awarding oil, gas and coal contracts to foreign companies (People’s resistance to global capital, govt collaboration is vindicated, New Age, January 3).

As for the food crisis, according to the Election Manifesto of Bangladesh Awami League-2008, ’commodity prices increased by 100 to 200 percent’ during the BNP Jamaat alliance rule (2001-2007), the ’infamous Hawa Bhaban’ under the ’leadership of the son of the [former] Prime Minister [Khaleda Zia]’ patronised ’criminal syndicates’. All true, but although the ruling party has changed, although Hawa Bhaban which ran a ’parallel government’ no longer exists, food syndicates still do. Fourteen months after taking power, finance minister AMA Muhith declared, a ’cartel or syndicate of traders’ is responsible for price hikes of essentials including rice, that the government was ’seeking ways and means to stabilise the market’ (February 2010). Six months later, it seems the government had stopped seeking ways and means, for as Muhith stated, government attempts to break up the syndicate had failed (August 12, 2010).

It is obvious that the ’rich’ interests which the Awami League government protects and promotes extend not only to the garment sector but also to oil, gas, coal and food. That the government is committed to serving the interests of global and local capital. Not those of the majority. Not those who voted it to power.

It should also be obvious that the rich of one sector collude with the rich of another. At a reception in May 2008, accorded by the Chittagong Chamber of Commerce and Industry and the BGMEA to the newly-elected office-bearers of FBCCI, the apex chamber body, the newly-elected FBCCI president Annisul Huq and other business people urged the government to take immediate steps for exploring coal and gas to overcome the energy crisis, to put an end to the debate on the coal policy, to go for open-pit coal mining (The Daily Star, May 3, 2008). Environmental activists say, the latter will lead to the forcible eviction of not 1,30,000 people as the government commissioned report claims, but ten times more, that it will wreck the environment. But those at the Chittagong reception seemed to shrug off these concerns, affected people could ’easily be rehabilitated’.

’We are not blood-suckers,’ he said excitedly, a young garment factory owner, whose name I’m afraid I couldn’t catch, he was on a talk show on a private TV channel, it was midway through, this was nearly 3 weeks ago. All this talk of ’capitalism’ and ’exploitation’ portrays us in a bad light. I refuse to listen to all this. I’ll walk out right now, he said, jerking his head toward what was presumably the studio door. While MM Akash, professor of economics, Dhaka University, sat silently grinning, while the anchor of the programme desperately tried to restore peace, I sat open-mouthed at the TV screen. Huh, and I’d thought all our drama queens belonged to parliament.

Over the last few weeks, I have had the fortune to watch two other live TV programmes graced by factory owners. I didn’t know whether to laugh or to cry when I heard AK Azad, president of the FBCCI, chairman of the Ha-Meem Group, fifth largest clothing manufacturer in Bangladesh, a big supplier of readymade garments for Gap, whose That’s It Sportswear at Ashulia caught fire last December leading to the death of 23 workers, insist that safety measures were meticulously followed in his factories. There were regular fire drills but since they were ’merely’ drills with no real fires, it had been difficult to foresee and prevent the deaths. Where on earth are real fires lit during drills?

And yes, both Azad, and later, in another TV programme, Anwar-Ul-Alam Chowdhury Parvez, former BGMEA president, owner of Evince Group, insisted (seemingly speaking from the same script), the new wage structure is being followed in their factories, in all other factories that they know of, to say otherwise is a smear campaign, out to malign the industry. They spoke in a voice of benevolence, their workers were happy, contented, well-looked after. Parvez got a bit carried away, I never fail to address them as my children, I call them baba, ma, but he quickly fell silent when the anchor interjected, ’but, how does that affect the wages paid?’

Factory owners’ self-construction as benevolent, kind, concerned and caring, as is evident from the discourse of BGMEA leaders, reminds me of colonial discourses since workers are simultaneously constructed as passive and backward, who are easily amenable to being ’incited’ and ’instigated’, who turn ’violent’, go ’berserk’, on a ’rampage’, who vandalise, loot and destroy. They need to be pacified, and to do so, an industrial police force has been established (October 2010). To maintain ’law and order’ in the export processing zones, said the prime minister, to help maintain ’smooth and uninterrupted productions’ at mills and factories.

Even though leaders admit at times that there may be a few bad apples among the owners who give the industry a bad name, as a collective, they authoritatively claim to represent the nation’s interest, for it is they who are taking the nation forward, who have strengthened the national economy. The garment industry is a national resource, they say, but in contemporary business speak, as Lucy Kellaway writes, ownership is the biggest lie of all. Using the ’national good’ as a rhetorical device covers ’private advantage’, simply using the word ’nation’ does not make one ’nationalists’ (David Burrow).

Genuine worker grievances-rising from meagre wages, by all accounts, far short of living costs, and ’notoriously’ bad safety records-are covered up by speeches, both by factory owners and political leaders, who point fingers at ’foreign’ forces bent on sabotaging the nation’s progress, at vested quarters attempting to spread anarchy, at creating terror. Foreign, one must note, are both good and bad, the good ones are those that the owners are aligned to, foreign buyers, foreign investors, while the baddies are international labour rights and human rights organisations with whom local and national groups network to fight against grave injustices toward Bangladesh’s garment workers, who have the privilege of receiving the lowest wages in the highest earning industrial sector. The only industrial sector in Bangladesh which, since its inception, has been wracked by labour unrest, one which often enough spills out into city streets, whether in Dhaka, or Chittagong or Narayanganj, which disrupts public life, causes death and injury to members of the public (on December 12, 2010, a rickshaw driver was killed when police fired at demonstrating workers in Chittagong EPZ), and severe financial losses (cars set alight, buses torched).

But BGMEA enjoys the blessings of prime ministers both past and present. During her first tenure as prime minister, Sheikh Hasina had inaugurated the construction of the BGMEA Bhaban in November 1998. After completion, in October 2006, the building was inaugurated by then prime minister, Khaleda Zia.

The 15-story structure, standing tall, is illegal, having been built on land that is government-owned, without approval from Rajuk, the city development authority, land which had been set aside for the Begunbari-Hatirjheel integrated development project. Having been built on land filling that was a part of the Hatirjheel lake, in gross violation of two laws, including the Environment and Wetland Protection Act 2000, it is said to be the main reason for chronic and severe water-logging in Dhaka city. Urban experts, academicians and environmentalists have repeatedly called on the government to demolish the BGMEA building because it is right in the middle of the canal, it ’defies the law in the heart of the city,’ it inspires others to violate the law (Abdullah Abu Sayeed).

BGMEA’s vice-president Shafiul Islam Mohiuddin’s response, the government must decide which is more important, the lake or the BGMEA, rests on the language of power. That of environmentalists, as do those of garment workers and their leaders, speak of justice. The law requires Rajuk to go ahead and demolish the building without waiting for a political decision, says noted environmentalist and director of the Bangladesh Environmental Lawyers Association Rezwana Hasan. ’If law is subject to politics, justice can never be ensured.’

I myself don’t understand what all the fuss is about. If the affected people of Phulbari can ’easily be rehabilitated’, surely, so can the BGMEA headquarters? Maybe it is time BGMEA leaders and members learnt to live by the law, not to bend it to serve their own sweet will. It is only then that their claims of being committed to ’national interests’ will be honoured by the public.

Copyright © New Age

P.S.

The above copyrighted material is reproduced here is public interest and for educational use only