Retailers divided over Bangladesh factory victims compensation
September 16, 2013 - A group of retailers and clothing brands failed on Thursday
to establish compensation funds for the victims of two Bangladesh factory disasters,
as many companies that sourced clothes from the buildings decided not to take part
in the process. At talks chaired by the International Labour Organisation (ILO) in
Geneva, the brands discussed setting up funds to compensate the victims of both the
Rana Plaza disaster in April, when an eight-storey building collapsed, killing 1,129
people, and a fire at the Tazreen factory in November 2012, which killed 112 workers.
The collapse of Rana Plaza, a factory built on swampy ground about 20 miles outside
Bangladesh's capital city Dhaka, ranks among the world's worst industrial accidents
and has galvanized brands to try to improve safety standards at suppliers. But only
nine out of the 28 brands being supplied from Rana Plaza came to the Geneva meeting,
with some of the absentees saying they preferred to pursue their own compensation
plans or citing issues with the approach adopted at the talks. The IndustriALL trade
union, which coordinated the talks, said the group that met on Thursday agreed to
contribute to a fund, but would meet again in the next two weeks to establish such
a fund, coordinating the process with parties including the Bangladesh government
and employers. (Source: Reuters)