Textile university in city soon: Nahid
September 5, 2010
Education Minister Nurul Islam Nahid yesterday said Tejgaon Textile College will be turned into a university soon.
He said the bill of the university would be placed in the first week of next session of the parliament, which will start on September 20.
BGMEA lauds govt decision to revive 270 sick RMG units
August 21, 2010
BGMEA Thursday appreciated the government’s latest decision of reviving 270 sick garment factories to help rehabilitate the units by resuming production.
Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) in a statement said the decision has proved that the government is industry and labour-friendly.
From RMG workers’ mouths
August 18, 2010
The delayed implementation of the newly announced wages sparked the recent protests by angry garment industry workers, dozens of workers said.
More than three of every four surveyed by The Daily Star said garment workers were the main force behind the protests demanding a hike in minimum wage to Tk 5,000 ($72) from the current Tk 1,662 ($24), fixed in 2006.
The new minimum wage was well below workers’ demand, but the unrest in Tejgaon, Ashulia and Narayanganj after the government set the Tk 3,000 ($43) wage on July 29, could have been largely avoided if it were effective immediately.
Instead, the roughly 80 percent wage hike occurs only on November 1. Garment workers will spend the year’s biggest religious festivals and spending season — Eid-ul-Fitr and Eid-ul-Azha — with only a meagre survival wage.
The workers remained mum during negotiations, hoping the increase would come sooner. But when they became sure they would only receive the increased wage three months later, they took to the streets. Dhaka saw a violent demonstration in the early hours of July 30, a day after the wage announcement.
The interviews were with 34 randomly selected workers in Tejgaon and Ashulia industrial neighbourhoods. The Daily Star conducted an open-ended questionnaire in the weeks after the protests.
AVOIDABLE IF NOT DELAYED
Some 73 percent of the workers who were interviewed expressed anger for delayed new wage.
More than 60 percent of workers even said the unrest could have avoided if they were assured of getting the incremental salary before Eid, even though the increased wage is 40 percent below workers’ demand.
“We all hoped to get the increased salary ahead of Eid,” said Doly Akhter Sumi, who works at a garment factory at Tejgaon, Dhaka. “Instead of ensuring the hiked wage before, the government takes time again for three months.”
Some of the anger arose from suspicion that the new pay-scale will not be implemented in November, but will, upon the pleas of owners, be delayed still further.
“I doubt whether this will be implemented by November,” said the 22-year-old worker, who earns nearly Tk 4,500 a month, including overtime, working 8am to 7pm a day.
Labour Minister Khandker Mosharraf Hossain was surprised by the reaction, however, even though the unions are not freely elected. “No one told me that the movement was because of belated implementation,” he said.
“We did not anticipate that there would be any protest. We thought that workers would accept the new announcement, as we have fixed the new wage on the basis of discussion with owners and workers.”
Workers said the government had given them the impression that they would get the new wages paid, not just set, before Eid. When the real date came, they became frustrated.
“The government had earlier assured us of giving new wage before Ramadan,” said Habibur Rahman, who works at a garment factory in Tejgaon. “But it says the new wage will be effective three months later to please owners.
“Although the new minimum wage is lower than our demand, we would have accepted it if we got hiked salaries immediately,” said the 26-year-old worker, who earns around Tk 4,000 monthly at the current wage.
The minister denied ensuring increased pay before Eid: “Legally, it takes six months for implementation. But we have advanced it by three months for the sake of workers.”
But a top factory owner, on the condition of anonymity, said the government did a poor job of dispelling these worker expectations.
“There was a lack of communication on the part of the negotiators,” he said.
Export performance—belated impact of recession?
August 10, 2010
Faruq A Siddiqi
It is good to know that improved export performance in April has helped pull export to a positive zone albeit marginally. Overall export in the first ten months registered a growth of 0.97% over the same period last year. However, it was 8.67% behind the target fixed for the period. It is a matter of greater concern that performance of garment sector, which accounts for more than 75% of our export, still shows a negative growth. Knitwear and woven garment exports are 2.06 and 1.38 percent down over the actual performance of the first ten months of last year. However, improved performance of RMG sector in April and excellent export performance of jute goods, raw jute, petroleum and engineering products have been able to bring the exports figure to the green zone from a negative growth figure of -0.80% at the end of March.
Sewing up in garments sector
August 10, 2010

IT is quite unfortunate that several thousand garment workers rampaged through different parts of the capital and Gazipur on July 30, rejecting the new wage structure and demanding Tk.5,000 as minimum wage from August. The angry workers vandalised vehicles and around 200 business establishments, including several garment factories, resulting in injury of at least 25 people including five police.
1 killed, 10 hurt in RMG workers-criminals clash in N’ganj
April 10, 2010
A young man was killed and 10 others were injured in a clash between garment workers and local criminals in Kanchpur area on Dhaka-Chittagong highway on Saturday.
EPZ and export market diversification
April 6, 2010
Should firms in export processing zones (EPZs) be allowed to sell their products in the domestic market on a limited basis?
Body to probe Gazipur garment factory fire
April 6, 2010
A three-member committee has been formed to investigate Thursday night’s devastating fire at Garib and Garib Sweater Factory in Gazipur that killed 21 workers and injured 20 others.
Asda’s Bangladesh workers to go on webcam
April 2, 2010


Asda wants shoppers to be able to see conditions in their factories. Photograph: Barry Batchelor/PA
Britain’s second biggest supermarket has put webcams into its foreign clothing factories in an effort to reassure customers that its standards and working conditions are up to scratch.
Asda is installing the cameras in two factories in Bangladesh where clothing is made for its George range so that customers can view what is happening at asda.com/yourasda.
Sick RMG units differ with govt decision on loan, interest payment
April 2, 2010
Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) yesterday differed with the government announcement about the payment of loan and interest by the sick apparel industries.
The finance ministry in a circular on Monday directed 270 owners of sick garment factories to pay the loan at one go within one year to get interest waiver facility.
“But, it’s not possible to pay back the loan within the time set by the finance ministry as all the 270 factories have been shut since 2005,” said a statement issued by the BGMEA.
The leading apparel trade body demanded payment of 100 percent interest from stimulus package, allowing payment of Tk 2 lakh for Tk 2 crore loan and Tk 3 lakh for Tk 3 crore-Tk 5 crore loan within a five-year period, the statement said.
The BGMEA also asked for rescheduling facility for 10 years in case of loans of Tk 5 crore and above with a down payment of Tk 5 lakh.
Source: http://www.thedailystar.net

