Global rights groups to quit RMG sustainability council, if no binding deal struck


FE REPORT | Published: May 19, 2021 13:22:51 | Updated: May 22, 2021 09:53:01


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Global rights groups have announced the decision to cease participation in the RMG Sustainability Council (RSC) that was formed to take over the Accord's activities and oversee the safety work in the garment industry of Bangladesh.

IndustriALL Global Union and UNI Global Union -- the labour signatories of the Bangladesh Accord -- on May 12 issued a notice saying those would withdraw from the RSC in Bangladesh on June 1 if a binding agreement is not reached, according to a statement.

The withdrawal means that IndustriALL, UNI and local unions in Bangladesh will no longer be part of the RSC and its board of directors, stripping away any credibility of the RSC as an effective worker safety organisation.

"The RSC will become a mere exercise in brand and factory self-monitoring without worker participation, independent oversight, or accountability," it said.

The RSC was created by the Accord through negotiations with the Bangladeshi garment industry in order to include factory owners as stakeholders, with the understanding of a new legally binding agreement between unions and brands to succeed the Accord.

However, once the Accord expires at the end of May, the RSC will lack a robust enforcement mechanism to ensure that brands meet their obligations and factories make reparations, added the statement.

The global unions cannot accept replacing the extremely effective Accord model with an alternative proposal from brands derived from the failed approaches of the decades prior to the Rana Plaza industrial homicide.

In recent months, global apparel brands have insisted upon a new framework for the future which discards the key elements that have led to the Accord's success in making garment factories in Bangladesh safe for workers, for example, individual brand accountability and independent monitoring of brands.

The brands' empty promises to renew the Accord and derogatory counter proposals have led to a critical point in Bangladesh garment factory safety and risk the lives of millions of garment workers in Bangladesh, said the statement.

UNI Global Union General Secretary Christy Hoffman said, "Instead of bargaining over the next phase of our joint safety work in Bangladesh, the brands have pursued an 'Accord Exit' strategy designed to write away any meaningful role for unions in the future."

"We can't be a rubber stamp for an industry-brand partnership without real accountability and robust oversight. This is a time when we should be moving forward and building on progress, not going in reverse."

IndustriALL Global Union General Secretary Valter Sanches said, "The Accord and the independent secretariat empowered to report on brand performance, and more recently through the cooperation agreement with the RSC, have successfully prevented the loss of lives during the last eight years."

The brands' proposal of self-monitoring is a dangerous step backwards and undermines the credibility of the programme, said Valter Sanches, adding that it would have immediate consequences for the safety of millions of workers in the brands' supply chains.

Since 2013, the Accord has inspected and monitored reparations in 2,000 factories and trained over two million workers in health and safety.

But over 1,200 factories are yet to have all measures implemented and verified to standard, said the statement.

UNI and IndustriALL in the statement, however, said they are willing to reconsider their decision to cease their participation in the RSC if brands sign a new agreement that continues the principles and obligations of the Accord and expands the principles and commitments to other countries.

Asked, Faruque Hassan, president of Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA), said this was an issue between global rights groups and brands over a separate agreement or renewal of the existing agreement -- therefore, he didn't want to make any comment on it.

He, however, said the RSC was made of 18 board members -- six each from industry, brands and global trade unions and the local affiliates -- to carry forward the achievements made by the Accord on workplace safety in Bangladesh.

"RSC is fully capable of ensuring highest standard monitoring, inspections and certifications of health, safety and securities of the workers of Bangladesh RMG factories," he noted.

Munni_fe@yahoo.com

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