According to a Dhaka Tribune report, like every year, just
before the Eid holidays, ready-made garment (RMG) workers had to resort to
street processions demanding their full salary and bonus.
Reports indicated
that RMG workers demonstrated in Mirpur, Uttara, and Savar, causing traffic
disruptions across Dhaka. Police dispersed them by shooting tear gas, injuring
many workers.
Though people have become accustomed to seeing protests by
RMG workers, these events are paradoxical if considered that the RMG industry
is one of the pillars of the country’s growing economy. Yet, these workers face
neglect and misery, and just before the Eid holidays, their tragedies become
more apparent.
The recent protests started after the government on April 11,
2022 instructed factory owners to pay 15 days’ wages before the holiday. The
Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) claimed that
factories were prepared to follow the directive, but “if any factory owners
want to pay their workers for the full month, they can.”
This is unfortunate that the government advised not to
disburse full salary — observers do not think any service holder would have
liked it if they did not get their full monthly salary and bonus before the Eid
holidays.
Since the government announced the directive to pay trunked
salaries before Eid, workers’ leaders predicted unrest, but the factory owners
repeatedly said there was no fear of turmoil. Since the decision was
publicized, observers heard the news about road blockades demanding full
salary. Skeptics claimed that worker leaders uttered the demands for their
interests or served a vested quarter.
One could argue that in capitalism, workers’ well-being is
hardly a concern for the industry owners. In addition, they are motivated by
profit-making possibilities. However, this tendency to hold back some money
before the workers go on holiday is a labour management strategy for ensuring
their timely return. But from the workers’ perspective, not receiving salary on
time is a significant breach of promise, as most workers would claim, “if we do
not get our salary on time, there is no point in going to our family.”
Bangladesh
will soon become a middle-income country, but when will RMG workers’ tragedies
end?
The difficulties RMG workers usually face in getting their
full salary and bonus seem incongruent with the export income earned by the
garment sector. Following the Covid-19 setback, businesses have gained pace; in
the last fiscal year, Bangladesh earned export proceeds of US$38.75 billion.
Besides, during the previous nine months (July-March) of this fiscal year,
Bangladesh exported RMG products worth US$31.42 billion gaining a YoY growth of
33.81%.
While the sector is thriving in business volume, the workers
had to take to the streets with demands to receive their salary on time.
To recap some events that shocked many during the two years
of the Covid-19 pandemic. Even though a stimulus package of Tk 5000 crore was
announced for the RMG sector, from April to May 2020 alone, 18,000 workers were
dismissed as per estimates of the Department of Inspection of Factories and
Establishments. Moreover, Transparency International Bangladesh (TIB) has found
that as much as 42% of the RMG workers primarily employed in micro, small, and
medium-sized factories, did not receive help from the stimulus package.
If one looks a little further back, during the first wave of
Covid in the country, on the morning of April 4, 2020, many were shocked to see
a rush toward Dhaka. This rang an alarm as the country was supposed to remain
under lockdown to minimize the risks of spreading the virus. Late in the evening
of that day, the BGMEA President requested the closure of all the factories
during the lockdown period.
But by then, many had travelled to Dhaka, and many were
stuck in between. As an institution, BGMEA restated that they could not force
any factories to remain closed. Unfortunately, the government did not ask the
factories to shut down; instead, it only discussed measures to ensure the
workers’ salaries were on time to justify their questionable actions. The
workers went through this toil as many did not receive their pending salary
before the lockdown started on March 26 and were likely to lose their jobs if
they would not report to the factory as and when instructed. The testimonies of
the returnee garment workers revealed such concerns.
Bangladesh went into another lockdown phase in 2021,
starting from July 23 until August 5. However, upon repeated requests from the
industry owners, the authorities suddenly decided on the afternoon of July 30
to reopen export-oriented industries on August 1, including the RMG sector —
while the entire country would follow the lockdown till 5 August. Therefore,
people rushed to get back to the industrial cities to save jobs, but there was
hardly enough public transport. Hence, these workers had to pay five to 10
times higher fares to reach their factories on time.
During the negotiations with the government, factory owners
claimed they would start operations with the workers living near factory areas,
and workers who travelled to the villages would join later. However, many
workers said factory supervisors contacted them over the phone and asked them
to join work on August 1. Ignoring health and social distancing directives,
hundreds of thousands of workers travelled in crammed goods transports,
auto-rickshaws, rickshaw vans, and even walked to their workplaces in Dhaka,
Narayanganj, and Gazipur to save their jobs.
RMG workers toil throughout the year towards meeting
production targets and eventually contribute to earning foreign currencies, but
it is tragic to see them protesting for unpaid salaries. For demanding their
rightful wage, workers face police brutality, and many workers lose their jobs
having allegations of “creating disruption” in production.
Even if these protests do not turn into outright conflict, these
events reflect the power imbalance between workers and owners — that culminated
in the Rana Plaza calamity back in 2013.