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April 28, 2013

From Farida Akhter in Bangladesh: “Forced to die”: Garment workers in Rana Plaza

Farida Akhter, a longtime activist and critic of the effects of corporate globalization, sent us her report and analysis of the recent disaster in the corruption-plagued garment industry in Bangladesh.

“Forced to die”: Garment workers in Rana Plaza


by Farida Akhter, UBINIG, Bangladesh

"Rana Plaza, the eight-story building housing at least four garment factories in the building’s third to eighth floors, collapsed on the morning of April 24, 2013.  It was not just an accident. The day before, the inhabitants of the buildings saw large cracks developing in the building and local engineers advised evacuation. Accordingly, the shops on the first floor and a private bank took measures for evacuation. The Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers Association (BGMEA) warned the garment factory owners of the building and asked them not to open the factory until they gave clearance. The workers were asked to leave in the afternoon of 23rd April.

But next day, April 24th, the factory management (from third to eighth floor) asked the workers to return to work and threatened to sack or not pay the salary to those workers who would not come to work. The garment workers did not want to come. They were afraid that the building might collapse anytime. Fearing the threat of being fired or losing salary, in the morning, around 8:30 am, more than 70% of the workers (roughly 3,500), were inside the building. The majority of them were young girls. There was a power cut (which is quite normal every day), so the generators were on. The building trembled and within two minutes it had collapsed, leaving no way to get out.

Sohel Rana, the owner of Rana Plaza, is a close affiliate of a Member of Parliament Talukdar Murad Jong of the ruling party Bangladesh Awami League. He built the eight story building obtaining the approval for only 5 storys from the municipal authorities in 2008. He built the building without following any building code, flouting rules and abusing his political clout. There was no one to monitor or see to the safety of the thousands of workers working in this building.

Aoshi, a female worker rescued after 36 hours of the collapse said, “Work at the (garment) factory was stopped following discovery of a crack in the building. We were not supposed to come (to work) following day. But we were asked to come and told that there will be no problem.”  

So it was not an accident, it was simply an organised killing." ...

Read full report here, pdf download, 4p.

Farida Akhter is a founder and Executive Director of the NGO UBINIG (
Policy Research for Development Alternatives) in Dhaka, Bangladesh, and a longtime spokeswoman for global justice and solidarity.
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