The below is an excerpt written by FIRST Union organiser Kate Davis during her recent trip to Bangladesh.
I awoke early on my first day in Dhaka, Bangladesh, to catch the women walking to work in droves. I must have seen thousands, not a child between them, all walking stoically toward the fenced factory doors, their brightly coloured dresses and scarves surreal in the bleak grey surroundings.
It’s been just over a month since Dame Denise Le’Strange Corbett was caught selling shirts from Bangladesh as New Zealand made. She explained away the fraud by claiming it was just the labels that were made in New Zealand. She went on to say that the factories in Bangladesh (where AS Colour’s t-shirts come from, t-shirts she purchased from the company), were made in factories where the workers had the same conditions as workers in New Zealand.
It’s been just over a month since I claimed she was wrong. It’s been four days since I arrived in Dhaka to prove my point.
When I first read the claim in the NZH I spat coffee. Then I heard her repeat the claim with John Campbell. At that point I dusted off my credit card and started to search Sky Scanner for a cheap flight. After that, it was just a matter of running my impulsive working holiday past my boss, and hooking up with some union contacts via the wonderfully connected union president Robert Reid and I was on my way.
My host while in Dhaka was Amirul Haque Amin, General Secretary of The National Garment Workers Federation (NGWF), a union that represents over 80,000 workers. Amin happily furnished me with the facts before dispatching me out into the Dhaka traffic madness to visits factories and meet workers. The garment industry is vast. It employs more than 4.2 million workers, 85% of whom are women. There are more than 5,500 factories.
As I read through the laws I started to think maybe Dame Denise (DD) was right. Maybe it was me who had a Eurocentric worldview and couldn’t accept that things were actually all tickety boo. According to local employment law people are paid a salary calculated monthly and after normal work hours can expect overtime which should be paid at twice the normal rate. Workers are entitled to at least one day off each week, casual leave for 10 days, earned leave of 18 days, annual leave of 18-20 days and of course maternity leave of four months on full pay which is going to be significant if 85% of your work force are women. It sounds fair, generous even, there were 11 days allotted for festival leave so I set out to try and prove my suspicions were wrong.
My first factory visit was to Dica-Tec in the suburb of Ashila. A German/Bengali partnership that employs 1,200 workers over five floors. Before embarking on the tour we sat down and had a chat with the proud factory manager who seemed to be under the misapprehension that my visit had something to do with the International Labour Organisation. I looked at my poor interpreter, Zarine, and decided correcting the misapprehension would be cruel so I rolled with it. The factory was beautiful; open, breezy, clean, and everyone was wearing protective masks. The women were decked out in a plethora of colour, a flurry of floaty fabric, and motioned like an animated industrial Monet. I was encouraged to walk the floor and take photos and I insisted on asking permission from the workers before taking photos much to the amusement of the general manager. They only work nine hours he said. They get a full ½ hour break, just the one. I asked about over time and he assured me they got paid for that too, they did two hours overtime a day. So they actually worked 11 hours. A small white lie that signaled a small red flag, but perhaps my suspicions were wrong.
The second factory, Multiple Fashion Ltd, was older and nobody was wearing masks. It employs a mere 700 workers. They have formed a union, 600 have joined. The union officials, about 20 young workers, followed me as I toured the floors. Management looked on beaming through clenched teeth. It made my heart happy. The machines were old, it was hotter, they showed me a sick bay with a doctor – okay he wasn’t an actual doctor – management confirmed this when I asked if he could write me a script. More like a first-aider. In hindsight I think he may have just been some guy. The thinly veiled attempt to show off world class working conditions was beginning to fail.
The first chance I had to speak to workers without the watchful eye of employers was after that factory visit and the following evening at local branch offices of the NGWF. They had put out the call, and around 20 attended the first night in Ashila, and 40 in Hemayetrur. The workers were from many different factories. They create the clothing for H&M, Zara, Max and Kmart among others. Almost every worker I interviewed had worked on H & M clothing. The following is a synopsis of what the workers told me, and each point was backed up by at least one other worker.
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When there are visitors to the factory, the owners tell the women what to wear or provide the clothing. Several women spoke of factories where they rented children for the day and turned a room into a crèche. I only heard of one factory that actually provided childcare. This went someway to explain the lack of children on the streets in the morning. They did the same with sick-bay rooms, creating mock health centres when visitors, especially buyers, were expected.
They work anything from 11- 21 hours a day, the average being 16 hours. They get one break of ½ an hour or an hour, depending on the factory. Overtime is not voluntary. You work the hours requested. You stay till the orders are filled. There is huge pressure placed on everyone to meet the production targets.
The women are routinely verbally and physically abused. Examples of this behaviour, and there were many, include yelling, slapping, pushing and humiliation. ‘Beating’, said a couple of workers,
‘We get beaten and we get punished.’ I asked what punishment was and this is one of the examples they gave; a woman forgot to change her outside footwear to indoor so the supervisor bound the shoes to the workers head and then paraded her around the factory floor while pushing her and mocking her, telling everyone how useless she was.
They aren’t allowed to talk to each other. Talking slows hands. If you have time to talk you should be sewing faster. Everyone is so busy, the one thing there is no time for is checking IDs. Several people knew of underage workers – it is not as common as it used to be but it still occurs.
If workers are sick they simply lose pay. They just take their money. Not that they routinely pay them correctly anyway. They don’t record overtime. If these women want to take a holiday day then they work late the entire week before. Some factories only allow one day off a month, some none. If they complain, they get fired. If they are sick they get fired. If they are old, they get fired. If they get pregnant they need to conceal it as long as possible, otherwise management will just keep increasing the person’s production targets so they start to fail, and then they fire them anyway. These are the conditions your clothes were likely made of.
Then at the end of the shift they walk home. I asked if it was safe. They looked nervously at each other then all talk at once. It is safe if you have someone to meet you, or walk in groups, but when you have no one it is not. There have been assaults. Attacks. Rape. Most of them can’t afford to live to close to the factories because rent is too expensive. Most of them walk for around an hour to get home. Then after working all day, meeting with me at night, some of the women kindly offered to take me home and show me where they lived. We arranged it for the following day.
When I went to finish the interviews I asked the woman what they wanted to change. What would make their lives better? More pay was rapidly followed with less abuse. They just want people to stop harassing, hitting, and belittling them. Their pay varied from Tk 5000 to Tk 7000 ($85-$120 NZD per month). Many get less than the legal minimum.
The following day we drove from the main roads, to the side roads, down alleys. We were still in downtown Dhaka and yet a world apart. My first visit was with Kulsum. She rents two rooms. The two rooms are home to her, her sister, two young brothers, her baby, and her mother. She has lived in the slum for 25 years. Almost her entire life. Both she and her sister work in the factories. Their income provides for the entire family. The rent on the tin shacks is Tk 5000. An entire wage.
Then I squeezed down some more alleys, ankle deep in mud, to visit Rani. She also rents two rooms – one for her, her husband and child, and another for her sister and brother in law, and their children.
There is no running water. There are four shared latrines for 15-20 families. In the morning there are queues. She has lived here for 15 years.
We sit for a bit and talk. These women are in some ways lucky. They have their children with them. They see them at the end of each day. Many of the other women leave their children in remote villages and will go up to a year without seeing them. I spoke to those women too. So many women I wish you could meet them all. As we sat, Kulsums mother who was cooking on the floor beside us offered me dinner.
As we drove back to my hotel it started to rain. Outside I watched the streams of women walking along the road, too poor for even a rickshaw. They smile and laugh, still eye catching in the vivid colours that brighten the bleak streets. It is so easy for us to romanticise them, fetishise them – these beautiful and exotic workers. But you don’t need to look too closely to see that their saris are soaked, their hands full of scars, and their eyes of exhaustion from the hours and hours they pour into their work, for the lives they sacrifice so we can have a few dollars off. The sweatshops that emerged from the late 1900s have not disappeared, as much as we all would like to think. These companies have not spent years perfecting the craft of garment-making; they have spent years perfecting the craft of concealing slave labour and it’s worlds apart from what the rest of the Western World imagines. You just need to bother to look.
