• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
Rank and File

Rank and File

trade unionism from below

  • News
  • Donate
  • Subscribe
    • About
    • Contact Us
Close
  • About
  • Contact Us

Labor Upheaval in Bangladesh Prompts Solidarity Actions

2/19/2019

By Saurav Sarkar

Thousands of Bangladeshi garment workers were recently fired after going on strike in January. Photo: Solidarity Center, CC BY 2.0 / Cropped from original.

With the sixth anniversary approaching of the Rana Plaza building collapse that killed over 1,000 workers, conditions in the world’s second-largest garment export industry are tumultuous.

Fifty thousand garment workers in Bangladesh struck earlier this month for higher wages and were met with rubber bullets and tear gas. The minimum wage in the garment industry was recently raised 50 percent, but still stands at just $95 a month. Five thousand have been fired as a result of the strikes and property destruction the striking workers are accused of. Bangladesh’s highest court has ordered shut down the Accord on Fire and Building Safety in Bangladesh, an innovative institution monitoring workplace health and safety created five years ago.

In response, activists have organized a week of solidarity protests in front of Bangladeshi government offices, including in Washington, D.C., New York, and London. The International Labor Rights Forum and Clean Clothes Campaign will also be delivering letters of protest to Bangladeshi government offices in cities around the world in addition to the eight cities where demonstrations were held.

The groups are demanding living wages for garment workers, safe factories, and an end to repression against garment workers in Bangladesh. The two non-profits are encouraging participants to take pictures of their Made in Bangladesh clothing and post it on social media with hashtags like #WeStandWithGarmentWorkers.

The Accord was established as the result of a legally binding agreement between international brands—predominantly European—and Bangladeshi unions to address the issues led to the Rana Plaza collapse in 2013, the worst industrial disaster in the history of the garment sector. For the past five years, the Accord has inspected factories and educated workers on workplace safety and their rights.

The Accord inspected more than 2,000 factories employing more than two million workers and found over 150,000 safety violations. Eighty-five percent of violations from the Accord’s initial inspections were remedied, leaving at least half the factories far safer than before.

It will be replaced by a government body that collaborates with manufacturers and the international brands. Bangladesh’s government, while it recently raised the minimum wage in the garment industry, is notoriously pro-management. In 2013, 10 percent of the country’s Parliament was made up of garment manufacturers, and union officials have alleged that the government’s security forces have harassed, tortured, and even murdered worker activists.

This article originally appeared at Labor Notes.

Share this...
Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on pinterest
Pinterest
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
Linkedin

By RF

Categories // garment workers, international solidarity

Tags // featured

Support rankandfile.ca

RankandFile.ca is committed to building a network of rank-and-file labour activists across the country. We believe sharing stories, experiences, debate, and analysis around our collective struggles strengthens our movement and builds solidarity.

Donate now

Join our
mailing list

  • Find us onTwitter
  • Find us onFacebook
  • Find us onInstagram

Rand and File logo
Copyright © Rank and File, 2026. All rights reserved.