Seven years after deadly fire, garment workers in Pakistan still need a worker-led factory safety programme
11-September-2019

Seven years since the Ali Enterprises
factory fire of 2012, in which over 250
workers were killed, textile and garment
factories in Pakistan remain as unsafe as
they were then, warns a report launched
today. Initiatives established in the past
years have failed to put workers and the
unions that represent them in the centre of
their programmes and therefore will fail to
meaningfully address the industry’s safety
issues. Unions and labour education
organizations in Pakistan are calling for a
mechanism modelled on the safety programme
put into place in 2013 after Bangladesh’s
deadly Rana Plaza building collapse.
On
this day our thoughts go out to all workers
who lived through this traumatizing tragedy
seven years ago and to the families who lost
loved ones on that day. Our thoughts are
also with all the workers who died or were
injured in preventable factory fires and
other incidents in the years after.
“The
total lack of adequate safety monitoring in
the Pakistan garment industry has cost
hundreds of lives over recent years. Even
measures that could be put into place
immediately, such as ensuring workers are
never locked inside factories and removing
stored product away from emergency exits,
could have made a difference, saving
hundreds of lives in the Ali Enterprises
fire and the many fires since,” says Khalid
Mahmood, Director of the Labour Education
Foundation in Pakistan.
The
report highlights that although multiple
initiatives aimed at addressing workplace
safety have been initiated in Pakistan since
2012, all of them have limited transparency
and none are enforceable. Most importantly,
none of them have been developed with the
participation of unions or other labour
rights groups in Pakistan. Worker
representation is missing not only in their
design, but also in their implementation and
governance.
Brands and retailers continue to channel
their energies through the very same
corporate auditing schemes that have failed
to meaningfully improve the industry or
prevent mass casualties in the past.
Pakistan’s government inspectorates remain
understaffed, underfunded, and unable to
meaningfully cover a growing industry. In
the meantime, workers continue to risk their
lives in unsafe factories and mills every
day.
“Pakistan’s garment factories continue to be
deathtraps. Seven years after this horrible
fire, it is high time for companies whose
clothes and home textiles are made in
Pakistan to start taking safety for workers
seriously. All
stakeholders in Pakistan’s textile and
garment industry, locally and
internationally, must take responsibility to
ensure safety for these workers,
putting the people who make their products
at the centre of their safety efforts,” says
Nasir Mansoor, President of the Pakistani
National Trade Union Federation.
The
report urges brands and retailers sourcing
from Pakistan to heed Pakistan’s labour
movement’s calls to support the formation of
a legally-binding agreement between apparel
brands and local and global unions and
labour rights groups to make workplaces
safe. Such an agreement must draw upon
lessons from the Accord on Fire and Building
Safety in Bangladesh, which amounts to
putting transparency, enforcement,
commercial obligations, and worker
participation at the centre of the
programme. It is essential for the safety of
workers that local unions and other local
workers’ rights organizations be involved in
the conceptualization, design, governance,
and implementation of any initiatives aimed
at improving occupational health and safety
in the country.
“We have seen in
Bangladesh, where two safety initiatives
emerged at the same time, that
worker-involvement, transparency, and a
binding nature are vital to creating a
successful safety programme. While the
corporate-controlled Alliance for Bangladesh
Worker Safety never involved independent
worker-representative groups in its design,
development, or governance and refused to
require legally-binding commitments from
companies, the Accord set a ground-breaking
new standard for a transformative
transparent, enforceable, and effective
inspection and remediation system. Any
safety programme in Pakistan must learn from
and build upon those lessons,” says Ineke
Zeldenrust, International Coordinator at
Clean Clothes Campaign.
The
report also recommends that Pakistan’s
national and provincial governments take a
series of steps to enhance compliance in
factories that would not be covered by the
foreseen labour-brand accord.
“In
addition to action by apparel companies
sourcing from Pakistan, it is important that
national and provincial governments increase
capacity, coverage, and effectiveness, in
order to make sure that all garment
factories and textile facilities in Pakistan
become safer – not only those producing for
the international market,” says Zulfiqar
Shah,
Joint Director of the Pakistan Institute of
Labour Education and Research.
Lastly, the report states that governments
in countries that headquarter major garment
brands and retailers can and must end
unaccountable self-monitoring by major
actors in the garment industry by putting in
place mandatory human rights due diligence
legislation, thus enforcing supply chain
accountability. To make a real difference in
the field of worker safety, social auditing
firms must furthermore be held liable for
faulty audits that might cost lives.
Contacts
Christie Miedema, Clean Clothes Campaign,
christie@cleanclothes.org,
0031 6 42060638.
Nasir
Mansoor, National Trade Union Federation,
ntufpak@gmail.com.
Shuja Qureshi, Pakistan
Institute of Labour Education and Research,
shuja98@gmail.com,
0092
300 392788.
Notes to editor
The
report “Pakistan’s Garment Workers Need a
Safety Accord”, by Clean Clothes Campaign,
International Labor Rights Forum, Labour
Education Foundation, National Trade Union
Federation, and Pakistan Institute of Labour
Education and Research is available at
www.laborrights.org/pakistansafety
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