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Garment workers revolt in Bangladesh
Friday, July 14 2006 @ 11:25 AM GMT-1
A working
class revolt in Bangladesh
Strike,
riot and fire among the garment workers
RM, for libcom.org news
In late May and
through June this year, there has been a wave of fierce class struggle
in the Bangladesh garment industry. To illustrate the scale of events:
around 4000 factories in Dhaka went on wildcat strike, 16 factories
were burnt down by strikers and hundreds more ransacked and looted,
pitched battles were fought with cops and private security forces in
workplaces and workers' neighbourhoods, main roads were blocked. Casualties
include 3 workers shot dead , thousands injured, several thousand jailed.
The Government eventually felt compelled to bring in the Army to restore
'order'. It was a working class revolt that spread beyond the workplace
and generalised to involve the wider working class community. At present
(early July) the struggle continues in the garment zones on a lesser
scale.
(Note; figures quoted from
different sources vary - I have generally taken the most commonly quoted.)
The Dhaka explosion
The revolt began on
Saturday 20th May in Sripur in the Gazipour district of Dhaka. 1,000
garment workers gathered at FS Sweater Factory, refusing to work
until 3 arrested fellow workers were released from custody. The factory
bosses locked the striking workers in the factory, cutting the power
and water supplies. Eventually, the sweltering heat proved too much
and by 11 am the workers fought their way out, then gathered on the
Dhaka-Mymensingh highway. Now joined by locals, they barricaded the
highway for 6 hours and fought pitched battles with the cops.[1] One
person was killed and 70 others, including cops and journalists, were
injured.
On the morning of
Monday, 22 May at Savar Export Processing Zone (EPZ), a suburb of
Dhaka, workers at Universal Garments Limited gathered in front of the
factory to demand payment of 3 months owed back wages. They were attacked
by factory security staff. In response the workers went to neighboring
factories and called out other garment workers for support. The
growing group of workers then went from factory to factory calling on
other workers to join them; 20,000 workers are reported to have joined
this angry procession. By the afternoon hundreds of other factories
in Savar EPZ and New EPZ had joined the strikes . Two factories were
torched and 100s more ransacked, over 300 hundred company and management
vehicles wrecked. The main roads going through Dhaka were blocked. Eventually
the clashes with police escalated and the cops responded with bullets.
The news of the escalation spread among the workplaces and drew out
most other workers into participating.
>"The day the 'riot'
broke out I had been on my way to office. Its not new these agitations
here in my locality (lot of RMG
[Ready Made Garment]factories are situated here)... I have been witnessing
this from a year or more….What struck me most was how this sort of
happening readily unified street vendors, rickshawwallas in one single
angry 'mob', which was throwing stones, crashing cars, setting fire
on big VOLVO buses. If its sort of an anarchy, I am for it with some
fears inside….." - eyewitness, 26/May/06
By Tuesday (23rd)
the revolt spread to more factories as more workers were picketed out
and the industrial areas of Dhaka were shut down by a generalised strike.
Workers took the revolt from the industrial suburbs, where factories
were now being looted, into the capital city itself, destroying cars
and attacking commercial buildings. Mass demonstrations demanded an
end to repression, release of arrested workers, higher minimum wages,
weekly time off, overtime pay for extra work, public holidays, payment
of wages due etc. (All these demands have since been agreed to.) Press
photographers were attacked, roads were blocked and clashes with security
forces continued. Thousands of strikers descended on factories, torching
4 and ransacking hundreds more. The Bangladesh Rifles were recalled
from their normal duties as Border Control and deployed across the areas
of unrest. By the evening 3,000 soldiers and armed cops were in occupation.
The garment industry
bosses were now urging the government to protect all factories with
troops. The garment owners also staged their own quite pathetic little
demonstration, lying down in the road in protest at the attacks on their
business. For news footage of the revolt and meetings of panicked bosses,
see; http://www.shuchinta.com/2006/05/25/some-clips-from-the-atn-news-on-the-attack-on-garments-industries/
On Wednesday (24th)
things calmed down in face of the massive police/army presence. The
bosses were showing signs of being willing to make some concessions,
though still refusing to allow the right to organise trade unions. It
is at present difficult to know if this is a demand voiced by the unions
or if it has much support among workers themselves. Union leaders were
brought in to negotiate a deal with the bosses. This was a breach of
the garment bosses' longstanding opposition to union recognition; also
a recognition of unions' useful potential role in containing struggle.
Throughout June,
clashes in the garment producing areas have continued, the main issues
being victimisation of militants, back pay, non-implementation of previously
agreed concessions. Strikes continually break out at individual factories,
workers nearby stop work to join in the spontaneous demonstrations.
Clashes with police, army and factory security continue, as do attacks
on company property. Bosses have also sometimes locked out workers from
factories when the breakdown in workplace discipline has become too
explosive. At times whole EPZ areas are closed off by troops. This is
made easier, once the workers have been driven out, as these industrial
zones are fenced off and have their own checkpoints - complete
with customs posts - due to their exceptional economic and tax status.
The garment owners are dragging their feet in implementing the concessions,
so workers remain continually in conflict with the bosses.
The garment bosses
have estimated their losses from the revolt so far at $70 million (and
rising!) in a compensation claim submitted to the government. They have
critcised the government's indecisiveness in dealing with the revolt.The
BGMEA have demanded that a permanent industrial police force be set
up to protect factory property in the event of future unrest. At present
the Rapid Action Battalion, an armed police/paramilitary grouping is
fulfilling this role. As the strikes at individual factories continue
and often spread to neighbouring workplaces, the RAB are rushed in to
attempt to disperse the angry crowds. But this does not encourage a
return to work and invites sympathy and similar action from neighbouring
workers.
A recent report
states; "The owners declared suspension of work at the apparel
manufacturing units at Jamgorah, Zirabo and Ashulia in Savar on Tuesday
amid an escalating labour unrest that left at least 100 people injured
and 20 vehicles damaged.
The crisis
came to a head as workers of Irish Fashion started a furious demonstration
in front of the garment factory over a rumoured murder of a co-worker
on Monday night and closure of the factory for indefinite period since
Tuesday morning.
The angry
workers went on the rampage, clashed with police and damaged about 20
vehicles, including two staff buses of a factory, during the mayhem....
Witnesses said following the Monday night's violence at Irish Fashion,
hundreds of workers of the factory came to work at around 7:00am. But,
they found a notice hung on the main gate saying the factory was closed
for indefinite period.
Enraged,
the nearly 6,000 workers of the seven-storey factory immediately tore
the notice into pieces, went on the warpath and started demonstrating.
Fearing attack,
police stationed inside the factory remained silent and did not come
out to disperse the agitating workers.
The mob pelted
brickbats at and forced some other factories to close, and chanted slogans,
urging workers of those plants to join forces with it.
Most of the
factories in the areas declared closure of work. Within a few minutes,
the majority of workers of those factories joined hands with their agitating
fellows and brought out a procession....
Fearing further
vandalism, the authorities announced closure of over 50 factories located
in the areas adjoining to the Dhaka Export Processing Zone for indefinite
period..... A tense situation is prevailing in the areas, with many
contingents of police, the paramilitary Bangladesh Rifles and the Rapid
Action Battalion deployed in front of the DEPZ and at others key points."
(New Age, 5/July/06)
"The government
agreed to release arrested workers and union officials, and to drop
the cases against them. It also promised to set up a "minimum wage
board for the garment sector and take steps to meet the demands of garment
workers," and -- in a bow to the manufacturers -- to investigate
the causes of the riots." (Power and Interest News Report;
http://pinr.com/report.php?ac=view_report&report_id=500&language_id=1)
"Following the unrest
in the garment sector, the factory owners at a tripartite meeting late
last month accepted almost all demands of the garment workers, including
the right to form trade unions, weekly holiday, maternity leave and
issuance of appointment letter and identity card (these letters and
cards are proof of employment and are often witheld to prevent workers
later claiming back pay when they are dismissed). The meeting formed
a minimum wage board comprising representatives from the government,
the garment factory owners and SKOP[workers' representatives] as the
workers demanded increase of minimum salary from Tk 940 [£7. 59/Eur10.
97/$14. 03] to Tk 3,000 [£22. 24/Eur 35. 03/$44. 79] because of the
unprecedented price hikes of essentials." (New Age, 29/June/06)
So far, as unrest in the factories continues, the bosses are resisting
agreeing to a minimum wage of Tk 3,000. (An average 30% wage rise.)
* * *
The
globalized sweatshop
Below we will briefly describe
general working conditions and some background to the revolt:
"Bangladesh is endowed
with abundant and cheap labour force that is easily trainable and convertible
into semi-skilled and skilled work force. Price, heavily weighted by
the labour cost, is one of the main determinants of comparative advantage
in the labour-intensive garment industry. The price of labour in our
country is lower compared to some of our neighbouring countries as well
as some other garment producing countries in South-East Asia and East
Europe. Obviously, existence of such cheap but easily trainable labour
is one of the advantages that Bangladesh enjoys and will be enjoying
over a considerable period in the context of international trade on
clothing."(Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association
[GMEA] website.)
"The garment workers
of Bangladesh may be the most deprived labor force in the world. Most
are paid between US$14 to US$16 per month, the lowest salary in the
world". - Amirul Haq Amin, Coordinator of the Bangladesh Garment
Workers Unity Council (BGWUC), 2005.
"I get Tk
900 [£7. 27/Eur10. 50/$13. 43] for a month of hard labour
which is not enough to even cover my food bills,' said a worker at Tejgaon.
'Can you show me one worker who runs his family without a hitch with
the money he gets?" -
Sagar, who works in SS Sweater factory.
"Bangladesh's
apparel sector now employ 2.5 million in more than 5,000 factories and
the largest industrial sector contribute more than 75 per cent to the
country's export earnings."
(New Age, 30/June/06)
[2.5 million is the highest and most recently quoted figure for workers
- most sources say 1.5 -1.8million.]
"In February
2005, the International Textile, Garment and Leather Workers' Federation
found that the [official] monthly minimum wage for Bangladesh's
garment workers was some $33 ten years ago, but that came down to $16
in real value due to devaluation of Bangladesh Taka against dollar.
The Brussels-based organisation
shows that in India and Pakistan, an apparel worker gets at least 20
cents per hour, in China 23 cents, in Sri Lanka 40 cents while in Thailand
the worker is paid 78 cents. "
(Bangladesh trotskyist Democratic Workers Party.)
This is
the modern face of 'Globalization'. Capital goes where there is surplus
labour to be had cheapest, installs its plant machinery and begins to
extract profits. Equally, local capital sees an opportunity to utilise
cheap local labour for the global market. In 1978 the Bangladesh government
set up Export Processing Zones (EPZs) to attract foreign capital and
earn export dollars. (100% foreign ownership, 65%; joint venture, 13%;
100% local venture, 22%.) In 1993 the Bangladesh Export Processing Zone
Authority (BEPZA) was set up and a blanket ban on trade union activity
imposed. An attractive investment location for investors, also including
tax breaks and other incentives. The EPZs now employ 70,000 workers,
mostly in the garment and shoe-making industries (though most
of the garment industry exists outside the EPZs). National labour laws
do not apply in the EPZs, leaving BEPZA in full control over work conditions,
wages and benefits. The garment industry is the life blood of the Bangladesh
economy. Garment factories in Bangladesh provide employment to 40 percent
of industrial workers. More than three-quarters of the $7.8 billion
of Bangladesh's export earnings comes from exporting garments. Despite
falling prices, export volume has grown, and business is booming at
present as the Bangladesh garment industry takes advantage of comparitively
cheaper labour costs and World Trade Organization restrictions put on
China, the world's largest Ready Made Garment (RMG) exporter. Bangladesh
RMG imports to the US have increased 25% this year so far.[2]
In its negotiation
of trade agreements with the US, the Bangladeshi garment industry is
attempting to box clever in the arena of geo-politics; "Dhaka
raised the issue that most of these countries rely heavily on the export
earnings of textiles and apparel which are subjected to some of the
highest US tariffs, averaging 17 percent.
"Any debacle in the
apparel industry would lead to massive unemployment of women, creating
economic and social instability, and have other possible ramifications,"
the Ambassador said, conveying his country's apprehension to his American
audience.
Elaborating on Bangladesh's
achievement in this sector, Chowdhury pointed out that in a society
where women empowerment is so deeply entrenched there is no scope for
religious radicalism. "This must be sustained," he emphasised."
(Bangladeshinfo.com, July 06) The implication being that lucrative
duty-free access to the American market will encourage social conditions
that lessen the possibility of a rise in Islamic fundamentalism. It
is true that the so far limited emergence of fundamentalism in
Dhaka has led to attacks on unions for their attempts to organise the
predominantly female RMG workforce.
In the generally stagnant
economy of Bangladesh, the ready made garment sector is the only significant
economic force. This sector is entirely export oriented and is composed
of over 5000 units - most working for international buyers, some owned
by international companies. Most of the garment units are clustered
in industrial areas and EPZs in and around Dhaka - Ghazipor, Savar,
Ashulia, Mirpur, Tejgaon, Mohakhali, Uttara, Wari and Tongi etc. The
textile and garments export constitute over 75% of a total of $7.8 billion
exports from Bangladesh.
Most of the garment
workers have migrated from the poorest rural areas into the city slums.
The slum population of Dhaka has doubled in the last 10 years. "More
than 90 per cent of the slum dwellers have income below poverty line,
which is Tk 5,000 a month a household. The dwellers are mostly transport
workers, day labourers, garment workers, small vendors, hawkers and
domestic helps..." (New Age.) It is this wider community
that joined in the clashes and rioted with the garment workers.
The 2 million or so
workers in the Bangladesh garment industry work for little more than
starvation wages, under conditions closer to those endured by European
workers 150-200 years ago. 90% are young girls and women from 12 years
upwards: physical and sexual abuse in the workplace is common. Average
rates of pay in the EPZs are $20 a month, less than half the supposed
official minimum wage, overtime is often compulsory and wages are sometimes
witheld for months. Outside the EPZs, where over 80% of garment workers
labour, conditions are worse. "Some of these garment workers earn
as as little as eight cents an hour, while the top wage for an experienced
sewer is just 18 cents. ...
Helpers earn: 8 cents an
hour; $3.64 a week/ $15.77 a month/ $189.28 a year.
Senior Sewing Operators earn:
18 cents an hour/ $8.40 a week/ $36.40 a month/ $436.80 a year."
"The bourgeois media
reports that the industry currently owes $US300,000 in back pay, a staggering
amount considering the miserly wages."
There are no guaranteed weekly days off, no holidays, no guaranteed
maternity leave, no annual leave. Employment is also often insecure;
workers change jobs frequently due to wage arrears, lay-offs, ill health
or harassment from the bosses and their security guards.
The workplace
is a highly dangerous place in this industry: in February and March
this year 2 fires killed over 100 workers and injured hundreds more,
provoking strikes. As is common, most exit doors were locked,
increasing casualties greatly. Also in February, a multi-storey factory
collapsed: originally built as a 2 storey building, then over-extended,
19 workers were killed and around 50 injured. Thousands of workers
have died from employers' neglect of safety procedures.
* * *
Unions and workers
Though there are 16
unions representing garment workers, according to the Democratic
Workers Party "...the level of unionisation among workers is
very low. Where unions are involved, they act more like extortionists,
taking money from management to keep the employees in line while at
the same time collecting dues from their members, with whom they have
virtually no contact. Most of the unions have direct or indirect links
with local and foreign NGOs, and receiving lucrative grants seems to
be their main goal."
Most of the
trade unions appear to be tools of one or other of the political parties,
strikes being used more as vehicles for pursuing political goals against
rival parties than improving workers' conditions. The Nation Garment
Workers Federation[3] apparently is an exception to this, being a more
grass-roots organisation, closer to an expression of workers' self-organisation
emerging from their own struggles. It would be too easy and simplistic
to apply critiques of modern western business unions to such an organisation.
11 years ago the NGWF was an organisation with 3 workers paid a basic
garment workers wage operating out of a shed in a workers slum. Working
in conditions more similar for workers in Europe a century or two ago,
basic organization for defence and improvement of working conditions
is a matter, sometimes, of whether one starves or not. With rapid large-scale
proletarianisation of rural workers in many parts of Asia (China, India
etc) struggles for unionisation are likely to follow. How institutionalised
and bureaucratised organs like the NGWF might have become is unclear
at present, and will be partly determined by their success as negotiators.
One can predict that official recognition, with a greater budget and
status to manage and protect, would accelerate that process. NGWF was
at one time (though apparently no longer) in an alliance with the BGWUC
, which has recently shown an eagerness to promise an obedient
workforce to the bosses. [4]
Though organising
trade unions was banned by employers in the EPZs, this is changing,
as one of the concessions won by the revolt. This is anyway a convenient
concession for the bosses; a Bill is being introduced into the US Senate
which, if passed, would ban all imports produced in sweatshops. This
is a form of US trade protectionism and corporate image management expressed
as concern for workers' conditions. The Bill would penalise Bangladesh,
Jordan etc and America's big rival China in, for example, the garment
industry, by attempting to undercut their present advantage of cheaper
labour costs.
"... the Greater Los
Angeles area ... has surpassed the New York area as the center of the
North American garment industry. Home to more than 1,000 manufacturers
who employ an estimated 90,000 workers, most of them immigrant, the
garment and related industries account for as much as 10 percent of
Los Angeles' economy, according to "Sweatshop Slaves." Nearly
one in five local employees today work in the garment industry, making
it Los Angeles' leading manufacturing sector." (Review of "Sweatshop
Slaves: Asian Americans in the Garment Industry",
Various, 2006.)
As well as the dire
conditions of employment, the low level of unionism is one likely reason
for the ferocity of the workers response. When it erupts, unmediated
class war is generally conducted more brutally on both sides. The Bangladesh
state finally realised this when it brought in union officials to mediate
and negotiate an end to the rebellion. In the long term, union representation
is usually granted by the bosses as a necessary safety valve mechanism
and tool of management for the stability of the production process.
* *
*
Riot
as struggle
Some commentators, from the
bourgeois media to the ultra-left, have considered the working class's
use of riot as a sign of organisational weakness. On the contrary, we
see their use of riot[5] and fire as brave and intelligent in a situation
where they faced brutal repression by a determined body of employers
and the armed forces of the state. Property damage combined with withdrawal
of labour is a time-honoured tactic of proletarians. Rioting also opens
up an opportunity for the wider working class community to become involved
in the struggle and immediately spread the perspective beyond isolated
sectional activity. When the cops and army invade workers' living areas
it is anyway inevitable that the neighbourhood is drawn into the struggle.
The extensive use of this tactic is also an inspiring example of effective
collective self-organisation that, for the garment workers, has been
far more successful than all previous struggles.
These events are part
of a wider situation where, with so many workers in Bangladesh working
at or below the level of a minimal wage necessary for survival, the
class struggle more readily takes extra-ordinary forms. Thousands of
primary school teachers have last week called off a hunger strike to
the death in a struggle for higher wages. 15 said they would 'self-immolate'
(set themselves on fire) if their demands were not met quickly. Negotiations
are ongoing. (New Age, Dhaka.)[6]
*
* *
The economics of exploitation
The workers'
revolt led to a sharp drop in share prices as international investors
panicked at reports of a 'workers' insurrection' in the garment industry.
At a meeting between the garment owners and the major international
buyers (Gap, Walmart, Asda, Carrefour etc) on June 29th, they were criticised
for their handling of labour relations. The bosses responded by saying
that the agreed concessions such as wage rises would be passed on to
the buyers and retailers abroad. One buyer's representative, claiming
fake indignation at low wages in the industry, (which never captured
their interest till now when it jeopardised smooth supply and cheap
price) replied by asking; why had wages not risen in 12 years
when prices had? (In the same period the cost of living for workers
had doubled.) " First Secretary and Chief Economic and Commercial
Officer of the US Embassy in Bangladesh David W Renz said it was not
enough to just increase the workers wages. "Improving the competitiveness
is vital to compete in the global market."
"Meaning: claw back the wage increases by pushing for higher
productivity.
The ruling class in
Bangladesh should be worried by this expression of workers' power -
a major revolt forcing major concessions in the only significant export
industry. Some Western analysts are already classifying the country
as 'a failing state' and it is rated as the most corrupt in the world
(in whatever way the ruling class calculates such things). This is causing
international concern at the potential destabilising influence on the
region. "The geopolitical significance of the riots lies in the
fact that they reveal the weakness of the Bangladeshi state. The failure
of the government to contain the violence quickly and opting instead
for half measures that satisfied neither side and did nothing to bring
them to an agreement points to an implosion of governability and indicates
that Bangladesh is drifting toward the status of a failed state. This
has implications for the stability of the South Asian region."
(pinr.com) The political system in Bangladesh is a vicious mess of
instability and regular political assassinations. There is no cohesion
within the ruling class, only warring factions perpetuating an economically
and politically vulnerable state.[7]
*
* *
For capital,
the competition in the global RMG sector grows fiercer. Upward wage
pressure, such as the Dhaka revolt expressed, will lead to demands for
greater productivity to compete with those countries that have managed
to keep the lid on wage demands. Competition for a bigger share
of the market will cause market saturation and price drops. The possibility
of new regulations outlawing or regulating sweatshop conditions by western
buyer countries, as a form of protectionism and to ease concerns about
corporate image, is another factor, as is import quota restriction by
both the EU and US. The neo-liberal globalizing project has exported
new forms of trade and production and, consequently, new forms of class
struggle.
RM
==================
NOTES
[1] By the evidence of press
photographs, the majority of demonstrators were male. There have been
some pictures showing female demonstrators, but the insufficient eveidence
gives an impression that the activity on the streets is predominantly
male, even though 90% of garment workers are female.
[2] "After the end of
the Multi-Fiber Agreement at the beginning of 2005 and the changeover
to the new World Trade Organization regime, it was feared that the Bangladesh's
booming textile industry would suffer as it would loose business to
countries like China and India. But fortunately for Bangladesh, so far
this prediction has been proved wrong. In fact, the industry has continued
to grow at a healthy rate of 20 percent. However, this does not indicate
that the Bangladesh garment industry has become more competitive. The
reality is that this increase has been largely due to restrictions imposed
on China by the Western nations than to the ingenuity in Dhaka or Chittagong.
The Chinese cannot be held back after 2008, which means a completely
different picture might emerge after that.
Industry also
faces various infrastructural problems. Due to shortage of power and
diesel industries are not able to work to their full capacity. Bangladesh
Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) fears that production
in RMG industry might fall by 50 percent and production cost might go
up by about 25 percent due to the crises. Due to power shortage shipments
are sent through air, thereby increasing its cost. Unfortunately the
government has not taken any step to improve the situation. On the other
hand, people have been shot dead for demanding regular supply of electricity."
(South Asia Anaysis Group. http://www.saag.org/%5Cpapers19%5Cpaper1852.html)
[3] For a description of
the functioning of the NGWF in 1995 see http://libcom.org/library/node/2141.
The NGWF membership estimates vary from 20,000 to 7-10,000. As workers
frequently change jobs, there is a high rate of fluctuation. For a description
by the ICG of class struggle in Bangladesh from the 1980s-90s see; http://libcom.org/library/burma-struggles-riots-icg
"The National Garment
Workers Federation (NGWF) of Bangladesh has the largest and most sustained
industrial union organizing drive in the world. Workers in hundreds
of factories have joined the NGWF. While they have no legal recognition,
workers in all these factories strike and protest together. While workers
in other countries try to organize shop by shop and judge their success
with union contracts, when they lose a particular struggle they are
left with no organization and no way to move forward. Long ago the NGWF
of Bangladesh made a decision to organize industrially and maintain
their organization and it's paid off. The NGWF maintains its own campaigns
and calls for international solidarity without the help of NGOs and
workers advocates." (New People, April 06, Pittsburgh, US.)
[4] The Bangladeshi Trotskyist
Democratic Workers Party describes the BGWUC as a collection of
"sham unions" (though whether this description is motivated
as much by political rivalry as political clarity is uncertain).
"On 3 May, garment
workers and supporters staged a peaceful protest against a sudden wage
cut in the Savar EPZ, 50 km north of the capital Dhaka. The management
of Ring Shine called in the police, who attacked the 1500 strong gathering.
One knitting operator, Rafiqul Islam, and one supporter, Mosharaf, were
shot dead and 200 injured. Outraged demonstrators ransacked the factory
in revenge. Six people were arrested, and a further 80 face charges
of property damage.
In mid-May the Bangladesh
Garments Workers Unity Council (BGWUC), comprising 8 such sham unions,
secured an agreement under which Ring Shine agreed to pay the medical
expenses of all injured workers, drop the charges filed against the
demonstrators, pay back wages and follow the BEPZA rules regarding minimum
wages and benefits, as well as compensation of about $US4,000 to the
families of the two men killed by police.
Under the agreement
the BGWUC promised to undertake "the responsibility for peaceful
operation of the factory and will ensure that the workers will not create
any further problem in future in the factory". A rival union, the Garments Unity Forum, staged a demonstration condemning
the deal as a sell-out but a few days later put its seal to the same
agreement. Such 'compromises' are not in the interest of the workers,
benefiting only the self-serving union bureaucrats and playing into
the hands of the bosses.
The Ring Shine incident
is the most recent example of the volatile situation within the fortress-like
compound at Savar, comprising 33,700 workers. In 1997, 15,000 of them
went on strike in defiance of the ban, demanding trade union rights
and job security." [Our emphasis.]
[5] Those left and ultra-leftist
'marxists' who routinely dismiss rioting as a valid form of working
class struggle (yet still slavishly take Marx's word on everything as
gospel) ignore the fact that Marx himself participated enthusiastically
in three 1855 riots of the London proletariat during mass demonstrations
against proposals to restrict pub opening times. On successive Sundays
working class demonstrators streamed out of Hyde Park into nearby rich
areas such as Belgravia, rioting and assaulting the rich and their property.
According to his companion, Liebknecht, Marx came close to being arrested.
Marx later wrote, "We saw it from beginning to end and do not
think it an exaggeration to say the English revolution began in Hyde
Park yesterday." (Unfortunately, it was an exaggeration.)
So despite what moralistic ultra-leftists and bourgeois alike may say,
Marx clearly saw rioting as a radical weapon of the proletariat.
[6] http://www.newagebd.com/front.html#3
- New Age, a Dhaka-based
daily paper, has been the most detailed mainstream media source on the
recent unrest.
[7] "The disadvantageous
material and economic situation of Bangladesh is a cause of and is compounded
by the lack of integration of its political class. Since its adoption
of democratic institutions in 1990, after a chaotic succession of ineffective
military governments, the country has been riven by severe and persistent
conflicts between its two major political parties -- the Awami League
(A.L.) and the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (B.N.P.). Whichever party
is out of power attempts to undermine the government through strikes
and non-cooperation. The destructive rivalry between the A.L. and the
B.N.P. is decidedly partisan rather than programmatic or ideological,
although the A.L. is allied with left and secular parties and the B.N.P.
with Islamic parties. [...]
The failure
of the two factions in the pre-democratic period to reconcile with one
another within democratic institutions has led to chronically ineffective
governance, exacerbated by unwillingness to compromise and readiness
to take direct action, with general strikes the preferred tactic. Most
recently, on April 20, 2006, the A.L. called a general strike demanding
Khaleda's resignation in the midst of a row over the constitution of
the country's electoral commission. Until February 2006, the A.L. had
been boycotting parliament after violent attacks on its rallies. [...]
The severity
of Bangladesh's partisanship is epitomized by the failure of the putatively
democratic parties to close ranks against extra-parliamentary tendencies.
Instead, they both have added fuel to the fires, accusing one another
of connivance with those tendencies." (pinr.com)