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Thousands demonstrate in Bangladesh after deadly blaze

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1 of 2. Army personnel load the body of a dead garment worker onto a rickshaw van after a devastating fire in a garment factory in Savar November 25, 2012. A fire swept through Tazreen Fashion factory in the Ashulia industrial belt of Dhaka, on the outskirts of Bangladesh's capital killing more than 100 people, the fire brigade said on Sunday, in the country's worst ever factory blaze. 

Credit: Reuters/Andrew Biraj

DHAKA | Mon Nov 26, 2012 2:52am EST

DHAKA (Reuters) - Thousands of angry textile workers demonstrated in the outskirts of Dhaka on Monday after a fire swept through a garment workshop at the weekend, killing more than 100 people in Bangladesh's worst-ever factory blaze.

Another fire broke out in a multi-storey garment factory in a Dhaka suburb on Monday, but a fire brigade official said the blaze was under control and there were no immediate reports that anyone had died in the latest blaze.

Workers of Tazreen Fashions and residents blocked roads and forced the closure of other factories in the industrial suburb of Ashulia, where the huge fire started on Saturday, demanding that those responsible for the disaster be punished.

"I haven't been able to find my mother," said one worker, who gave her name as Shahida. "I demand justice, I demand that the owner be arrested."

Police and officials said narrow exits in the nine-storey building trapped workers inside, killing 111 people and injuring more than 150.

"This disastrous fire incident was a result of continuing neglect of workers' safety and their welfare," said Amirul Haque Amin, president of Bangladesh's National Garment Workers Federation.

"Whenever a fire or accident occurs, the government sets up an investigation and the authorities - including factory owners - pay out some money and hold out assurances to improve safety standards and working conditions. But they never do it."

Working conditions at Bangladeshi factories are notoriously poor, with little enforcement of safety laws, and overcrowding and locked fire doors are common. More than 300 factories near the capital shut for almost a week this year as workers demanded higher wages and better conditions.

At least 500 people have died in clothing factory accidents in Bangladesh since 2006, according to fire brigade officials.

Bangladesh has about 4,500 garment factories and is the world's biggest exporter of clothing after China, with garments making up 80 percent of its $24 billion annual exports.

Hong Kong-listed Li & Fung said in a statement that it had placed orders for garments from Tazreen Fashions which were being manufactured on the premises where the fire broke out. It said it would provide relief to victims' families, and carry out its own investigation into what caused the blaze.

A spokesperson for U.S. retail chain Wal-Mart Stories Inc. in India said the company was "trying to determine if the factory has a current relationship with Walmart or one of our suppliers".

(Reporting by Serajul Quadir and Anis Ahmed; Writing by John Chalmers; Editing by Robert Birsel)

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Comments (3)
paintcan wrote:
This sounds so like the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory blaze in Lower Manhattan a little over 100 years ago. Locked doors also kept those women trapped in the room. It evidently spread so fast that one woman was found upright at her sewing machine with no head. But the rest of her was intact apparently and still dressed? It sounded like the fire burned fiercely leaving about four feet of space near the floor.

New Yorkers changed the laws very quickly and that scale of fire disaster didn’t happen again in exactly the same way. The major killer fires that occurred in the 20th century seem to have been nightclubs that weren’t giving adequate attention to patron’s safety. There was a recent one, either here in New Hampshire or in Massachusetts, where the patrons watched the stage catching fire because the fire was part of the act and they didn’t quite get it until it was obvious it wasn’t an act.

A similar problem with delayed reaction occurred with a fireworks display to celebrate the opening of the CCTV building in China. A firework landed on the roof of the incomplete hotel that was part of the complex and started a blaze that burned out all 40 or 50 floors of the building. Apparently, a full height atrium made it possible for the burning roof to spark the interior from the ground floor up. There used to be a video (may still be there) on youTube that shows the burning firework as people in a neighboring tower filmed it. It burned for almost 30 minutes before it caught the roofing material and it started to melt and burn. The people that filmed it didn’t quite catch on that there was a major problem starting but you could hear them wondering what to do about. I don’t know whether or not they tried to contact authorities. I think they said something that it was burning for too long.

Nov 26, 2012 11:06am EST  --  Report as abuse
TheUSofA wrote:
The workers being exploited the world over need to unionize. The corporations that profit need to be held accountable and the consumers addicted to mindless consumption need to be better educated as to the true cost of their cheap goods.

Just like in China, organizers are threatened, jailed, tortured and even killed.

“Tensions have been running high between workers, who have been demanding an increase in minimum wages, and the factory owners and government. A union organizer, Aminul Islam, who campaigned for better working conditions and higher wages, was found tortured and killed outside Dhaka this year.”

www.cleanclothes.org/

Nov 26, 2012 3:24pm EST  --  Report as abuse
kiwibird wrote:
It is such a disgrace, we need a documentary maker to go and do an undercover expose on this matter; exploitation of workers. It is a shame on everyone of us in the West that buy these goods and garments.

Nov 26, 2012 4:23pm EST  --  Report as abuse
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