Bangladesh garment workers on strike, demand higher wages
25 Sept. 2013: Garment workers in Bangladesh have been on strike for the past three
days to demand a minimum monthly salary of 8,000 taka (US$ 100). "With the 3,000 taka
(US$ 40) that I take now, I cannot buy medicine for my mother," a young worker said.
Collapsed buildings in the Tazreen Fashion and Rana Plaza cases revealed the inhuman
conditions in which more than 2 million garment workers live. Tens of thousands
of garment workers in the Bangladeshi capital of Dhaka are striking, blocking many
of the country's roads and plants, in order to get an increase in the minimum monthly
wage. The protest has disrupted traffic and vehicle movement, as well as the production,
but workers say that “only by making our voices heard can we change something." In
the capital of Dhaka alone, more than 50,000 workers are in the streets. Workers want
the minimum monthly wage to rise to 8,000 taka. Bangladesh is the 2nd largest garments
production country after China. Textiles account for over 10 per cent of the GDP.
The country has about 4,500 factories, employing more than 2 million people, 70 per
cent of whom are women. However, workers are often treated like slaves and forced
to work in unsafe conditions, with thousands of people crammed on a single floor,
for at least 12 hours a day. Sometimes employers even suspend the one weekly day off,
if there are too many holidays. Recent protests have intensified in recent months,
after the Tazreen Fashion and Rana Plaza tragedies. The two occurred close to each
other, killing thousands of people. Source: Asianews