Bangladesh Garment Factory Workers Killed by Wal-Mart’s Low Prices

Latest

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Walmart workers and supporters protest in Chicago on Black Friday, joining hundredsof coordinated Walmart protests across the ountry.
Walmart workers and supporters protest in Chicago on Black Friday, joining hundreds of coordinated Walmart protests across the ountry. Photo/Brett Jelinek


By Andi Sosin & Joel Sosinsky, Remember the Triangle Fire Coalition

NEW YORK CITY, NY—One day after “Black Friday,” when shoppers rushed to stores to buy holiday gifts and OUR WALMART rallied to raise salaries and increase full-time jobs with benefits across the US, a fire killed 112 apparel workers at Tazreen Fashion Ltd., a garment factory in Bangladesh that had no emergency exits. In an eerie similarity to the Triangle shirtwaist factory fire of 1911, many workers jumped to their deaths from the eighth floor to escape the flames. Three managers are accused of disregarding fire alarms and locking workers inside, where they were trapped by heavy smoke and suffocated or burned. Wal-Mart has disavowed implications of guilt for the fire because it had officially ceased using the Tazreen factory, although Wal-Mart’s private label clothing was found in the charred remains.
As Wal-Mart and its retail competitors seek the cheapest prices from dependent countries, they systematically contribute to the negligence of government officials and factory owners who cut corners on safety precautions. This fire was Bangladesh’s deadliest, but according to the International Labor Rights Forum, unsafe buildings and lax safety regulation enforcement have resulted in the deaths of approximately 700 Bangladeshi apparel workers since 2005, and of hundreds of other deaths in Pakistan and other cheap labor nations.
What connects the fire in Bangladesh to the Black Friday strike by US workers is Wal-Mart’s insistence on low prices at any cost. Despite its happy face rhetoric, Wal-Mart pays most of its US workforce minimum wage without health benefits or job security. It has fiercely fought off labor unions in the US and around the world. OUR WALMART’s Black Friday actions concentrated on improving conditions for Wal-Mart retail and warehouse workers in the US have been met with general public approval. While global labor solidarity is admittedly difficult to achieve in the current dire economic climate, commonalities between US workers and those elsewhere in the world are clear. Global solidarity among workers is the only way to reform labor practices in a power struggle with multi-national corporations. Bangladeshi workers are paid pennies in comparison with US workers, but their struggle for safe working conditions and living wages has consequences for workers in the US. As OUR WALMART gains public support it must consider lending its voice to support the struggles for safe workplaces undertaken by workers in Wal-Mart’s global supply chain, and not countenance a sordid and deadly race to the bottom.
The Remember the Triangle Fire Coalition regards the Triangle shirtwaist factory fire of 1911 as the prime motivator for today’s stringent workplace safety requirements and the progressive labor laws that created the US middle class. The lessons of the Triangle fire must not be forgotten at the peril of workers around the world. Designs for a Triangle Fire memorial are now being sought. For more information, visit rememberthetrianglefire.org.

Free to republish but please credit the People's Tribune. Visit us at www.peoplestribune.org, email peoplestribune@gmail.com, or call 773-486-3551.

The People’s Tribune brings you articles written by individuals or organizations, along with our own reporting. Bylined articles reflect the views of the authors. Unsigned articles reflect the views of the editorial board. Please credit the source when sharing: ©2024 peoplestribune.org. Please donate to help us keep bringing you voices of the movement. Click here. We’re all volunteer, no paid staff.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Featured

Supreme Court Dismantles Federal Regulation of Business

Recent Supreme Court decisions have opened the floodgates to allow corporate interests, in the name of profit, to dismantle the system of federal regulation that protects our rights and wellbeing.

Campaign to Debunk the Lies about Migrants and Refugees

Join a campaign to combat the mainstream lies and shine a moral light on the truth: that no human being is illegal, and seeking asylum is a human right.

U.S. Supreme Court’s Criminalization of Homeless Met with Universal Disgust

A movement is growing against the latest “legalized” atrocity on the most vulnerable, in governments, among advocates, ordinary people, and most importantly, by organized and individual homeless people. As said in the homeless movement, “We only get what we are organized to take!”

Project 2025: Far Right’s Plan to Demolish Immigration Threatens All of Us

The right-wing Heritage Foundation's Project 2025, billed as a policy playbook for a second Trump administration, includes provisions that would demolish the existing immigration system and set the stage for mass deportations.

Supreme Court Rules Arresting, Citing People for Not Having Shelter is Constitutional

Criminalizing the homeless for sleeping in public spaces when having no other option does not violate the cruel and unusual punishment clause of U.S. Constitution’s Eighth Amendment, according to new ruling.

More from the People's Tribune