US corporations risk foreign workers’ lives - then evade blame
Priyanka Borpujari, for Boston Globe
Hello,
Following the fire in the factory in Bangaldesh, there has been much noise about workers' safety. And then suddenly, the noise goes down. In this column in the Boston Globe that appeared on Jan 2nd, I argue that time and again, corporations fail to act responsibly, and the apathy of consumers does not push them to be responsible. Here is the link to the article, and am pasting it below too, lest you are unable to access the website for subscription issues. Thanks for reading. Warmly, Priyanka
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Deadly savingsUS corporations risk foreign workers’ lives — then evade blameBy Priyanka Borpujari
At 4:45 p.m. on March 25, 2011, hundreds of bells
rang across cities and towns in the United States to commemorate the 100th
anniversary of the Triangle Shirtwaist factory fire. The fire, which killed 146
garment workers — 129 of them women — managed to get the New York State
Legislature to create the Factory Investigative Commission, which eventually
made way for better labor laws.
It has been a century since that fire that woke up the United States to labor
and worker safety reforms. But nothing has changed in another part of the world
— where many US companies are currently manufacturing their products. On Nov.
24, 2012, 112 garment workers were killed in a blaze at the Tazreen Fashions
factory in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Just two months earlier, on Sept. 5, 25 workers at
a fireworks factory in Sivakasi, India, were killed under similar circumstances;
a week later, a total of 283 workers died in two separate fires in Pakistan —
258 in a garment factory in Karachi, and 25 in a shoe factory in Lahore. Two
years ago, 29 people were killed in a similar fire in Dhaka, Bangladesh, while
manufacturing Gap products. In each of the cases, the fires were followed by a
blame game over responsibility and liability. Interestingly, only the fire in
Bangladesh has made international headlines because the factory was used by one
of the suppliers of Walmart.
But will this well-deserved media attention bring about justice for the
families of the victims? An incident like this surely does not go down well in
the annual report of companies. For the American companies that worked through
numerous intermediaries to get their products made cheaply, the immediate
response has repeatedly been to disassociate from the incident, and thereby
avoid taking any responsibility for any safety lapse or liability. Walmart has
said that it has already fired its supplier, Success Apparel, which had
outsourced work to a company called Tuba Group, which owns the Tazreen Fashions
factory. Success Apparel has said that it did not know its clothes were being
made at the Tazreen Fashions factory. In this maze of subcontracting, which is a
norm in the race to minimize costs, the lives of the workers are in limbo, with
nobody ready to take responsibility for their working conditions.
Only $470 million has been doled out by Union Carbide Corporation as
compensation to the victims of the Bhopal gas tragedy, one of the world’s worst
industrial disasters. On Dec. 2, 1984, 27 tons of methyl isocyanate leaked into
the city of Bhopal in central India, killing 25,000 people to date, with 120,000
still suffering from air and water pollution. Dow Chemical Company, which merged
with Union Carbide in 2001, denies any liability for the incident. It continues
to evade Indian courts and the demand for compensation. Almost three decade
since the accident, Bhopalis await justice. A horrible disaster, a worse
injustice thereafter.
Time and again, corporations have tried to save face by sponsoring sporting
events and launching humanitarian foundations. Dow Chemical was the worldwide
partner for the London Olympics in 2012. But wouldn’t taking up responsibility
for accidents and cleaning up the mess be a better and more credible PR exercise
to impress their audience?
But that audience surely does not include
workers. At a 2011 meeting to find ways to improve safety at Bangladesh garment
factories, according to Bloomberg News, Walmart and Gap officials told attendees
that they were not willing to participate in paying for the electrical and fire
safety of the 4,500 garment factories in the country. This, they said, was
financially nonviable. But the Washington-based Worker Rights Consortium has
found that such essential safety upgrades would cost just 10 cents per garment.
Yet, for Walmart, which has been reported to outsource the making of garments
worth more than $1 billion a year in Bangladesh, saving 10 cents per item
appears to be more important than the safety of the workers.
Walmart rides high on its popularity in the
United States. With economics and numbers fueling a company’s growth, might it
be possible for Walmart’s customer base to demand their favorite store act more
responsibly, even as they continue to enjoy its competitively low prices?
Perhaps it is up to its customers to decide if 10 cents for a garment is more
expensive than the safety of the person who makes it under pathetic conditions.
A new wave of safety reforms is also needed, along with a corporate social
responsibility that goes beyond events sponsorships and colorful brochures with
photographs of smiling children.
Priyanka Borpujari is a journalist based in
Mumbai. She is the IWMF/Elizabeth Neuffer fellow for 2012-13.
Priyanka
Borpujari
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