Unions, corporations pledge to guarantee
safety of garment workers
20 December 2022
After almost a decade-long campaign by
workers and global unions, multi-national
garment brands in Pakistan have finally
announced their acceptance of a Workplace
Health and Safety Programme (WSP) for
garment workers in Pakistan this December.
The announcement was made during a signatory
brand caucus meeting in Amsterdam on
December 14.
Brands will be sent an information package
on the International Accord for Health and
Safety in the Textile and Garment Industry
to be formally signed on January 16.
This move will work to establish a
comprehensive pro-worker program in
Pakistan’s textile industry, which comprises
an estimated 2.2 million workers. The
industry is particularly important in Sindh
and Punjab provinces, with garment exports
worth $20 billion annually.
“With the Pakistan Accord, we will improve
safety and save lives and increase our reach
from the garment sector to home textiles and
accessories. International retailers and
brands that source from Pakistan that want
to be committed to safety should sign up and
take responsibility for the workers in their
supply chains,” UNI Global Union General
Secretary Christy Hoffman said in a
statement.
Garment and textile workers in Pakistan have
labored in hazardous conditions for years,
and, despite tragedies such as the Ali
Enterprises factory fire in Karachi in 2012,
little has changed in the industry. Local
consultations and signatory surveys found
that most factories in the country operate
without the oversight of regulatory bodies
and workers have little or no access to
redressal mechanisms.
“If enough brands sign, workers will not
have to fear for their lives when going to
work and will know who to appeal to when
their factory is unsafe. The strength of the
Accord is in the fact that unions have equal
power to corporations in its
decision-making,” Nasir Mansoor, general
secretary of the National Trade Union
Federation Pakistan, said in a statement
released by the Worker Rights Consortium.
Building on the work done in Bangladesh
after the Rana Plaza and Tazreen Fashion
disasters, the Accord is a legally-binding
agreement between global unions and garment
brands and retailers for an initial term of
three years, starting in 2023. It will cover
workplace inspections, industrial accidents,
and safety and awareness training for
workers, including on gender-based violence.
The Accord will be implemented in phases,
and at its outset will cover the operations
of more than 500 factories. Activists hope
that the program will eventually encompass
thousands of industrial concerns across
Pakistan.
“Pakistani garment workers will now face a
safer future in their workplaces—preventable
deaths and accidents will rapidly decrease
as the programme is implemented, workers
will receive training on occupational health
and safety, which will empower them and
hopefully they will see the benefit of
joining a trade union to fight collectively
for their rights,” explained Atle Høie,
general secretary, IndustriALL Global Union. |