April 10,
2007 Spectrum
Workers Receive First Payments from Compensation
Fund: Carrefour still Refusing to Participate
SPECTRUM/SHAHRIYAR UPDATE
#12,
Days
before the second anniversary of the Spectrum garment
factory collapse, which killed 64 and injured 80
(54 seriously), 22 workers received the first distribution
of a US$ 60,000 advance from the fund.
Zarina's husband was one of the 64 workers killed when the Spectrum garment factory collapsed in 2005. Since that time Zarina, shown here with her seven-year-old son, has had to take out loans to provide the most basic necessities for her family.
At an April 1st meeting in Dhaka, Inditex (Zara),
initiator of the fund, distributed about US$ 3,000
to the workers and has pledged that the rest of
the $60,000 advance will reach the remaining families
shortly. Present also were representatives of
the fund's co-initiator, the International Textile
Garment and Leather Workers Federation (ITGLWF),
local organizations, and trade unions.
The launch of the fund, originally scheduled
for September 2006, has been eagerly awaited.
The fund is intended to provide compensation for
loss of income and follows previous efforts to
provide medical care and other types of emergency
relief. Many survivors were unable to provide
for their families due to the injuries they sustained
in the April 2005 building collapse; those who
lost family members in the collapse were often
left without their main source of income. Many
of the Spectrum families have plunged further
into poverty and debt as they struggled to keep
their families afloat.
Though they produced their garments at the factory, French retail giant Carrefour has refused to pay into the fund to compensate the Spectrum families.
"Every month I have to take out a loan
to maintain my family," said 40-year-old
Zarina, whose husband Solaiman was killed in the
factory collapse. She and her three children only
have her daughter's meagre income from another
garment factory job, which does not cover their
basic needs. "I cannot repay the loans, the
amount is increasing day by day
I feel
sick while thinking about all this."
Several companies producing at Spectrum and the
adjoining Shahriyar Fabric -Inditex
(Spain), KarstadtQuelle
(Germany), New Wave Group
(Sweden), Scapino
(Netherlands), and Solo Invest
(France) have agreed to participate in
the fund, which will provide a monthly income
to survivors and families of those who died at
the factory that produced their garments, built
on a swamp and not up to standard.
Those who have not committed to the compensation
trust fund include: Carrefour
(France), Cotton Group
(Belgium), New Yorker, Steilmann,
Kirsten Mode, and Bluhmod (Germany).
The CCC is extremely pleased that the fund will
now become a reality for the workers and wishes
to thank all those who have contributed to making
this happen. The CCC will continue to monitor
the progress of the fund and will continue to
call upon Carrefour and the other companies who
have so far refused to participate in the initiative
to contribute to the fund.
Take action now to support
the Spectrum workers >>
For more information on the Spectrum disaster
and the health and safety conditions in the garment
industry in Bangladesh, please see the report
launched by the Belgian (French speaking) CCC
on the occasion of the second anniversary of the
collapse at www.vetementspropres.be
Background to the fund
Nur-E-Alam , right, lost his left arm after waiting 17 hours to be rescued from the rubble at the Spectrum factory on April 11, 2005. E-Alam, here with his wife and two sons, visited Europe in 2006 to push companies to contribute to a compensation fund and to raise awareness of the desperate situation the Spectrum families are forced to live in.
Following a period of intense campaigning by
Bangladeshi and international NGOs and trade unions
to push companies sourcing at Spectrum to take
action, in July last year one of the buyers at
Spectrum, the Spanish retailer Inditex, circulated
the final proposal for the Spectrum voluntary
relief scheme, which would set up a trust to provide
an income for the families of the victims and
workers injured.
An initial proposal had been circulated for comments
in early 2006, and a number of roundtable meetings
for former Spectrum buyers and other stakeholders
were convened by Inditex and the ITGLWF. The relief
scheme took over a year to put together, and is
based on extensive and detailed research (conducted
by the NGO Incidin Bangladesh and others) to compile
information on the victims, their families, and
those injured in the collapse. The total amount
required is pegged at 533,323 euros. The trust
will be governed by a board of trustees involving
representatives of all contributing stakeholder
groups. In addition to contributions from the
brands and retailers sourcing from Spectrum it
is envisaged that funding would come from Spectrum,
the government of Bangladesh, and the Bangladesh
Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association
(BGMEA), as well as public subscriptions from
civil society organizations and from individuals.
Spanish retailer Inditex, initiators of the fund, is providing US$60,000 for advance payments from the fund to the Spectrum families.
In September 2006 the German company Karstadt
Quelle agreed to participate in the fund, and
in subsequent meetings in October and November
confirmed their participation for an amount of
at least 100,000 euros. This agreement followed
efforts from many organizations and individuals
in Germany, and the CCC wishes to thank all who
participated, in particular the German Protestant
church. Small buyer Solo (based in France) has
also agreed to participate, pledging 5,000 euros,
as has Dutch company Scapino and Swedish New Wave
Group.
Following the collapse, the families of the dead
(with the exception of three) received 100,000
taka each (approx. 1,084 euros) from the factory
owner and the government, as has become standard
practice in recent years. The owner of Spectrum-Shariyar
occasionally has provided some income for some
families, and some emergency money has been paid
out of the initial 25,000 euros that Inditex put
up in June 2005 for medical care and other relief.
When the fund was presented to the buyers in July
2006, the total of these payments was calculated
at 85,000 euros, to be subtracted from the sum
that workers would eventually receive. For more
details on past efforts to provide support to
the Spectrum families please
visit our page on the Spectrum dissaster.
None of this support should in any way be confused
with the outstanding need to provide long-term
compensation for the loss of income.
Irresponsible buyers
After initial resistence, German company KarstadtQuelle agreed to contribute 100,000 euros to the fund to help support the families of their former workers.
Despite claiming to be among the forefront of
socially responsible companies, French-based giant
Carrefour continues to refuse participation, claiming
that compensation is an issue for government.
In the CCC's view, their actions (or more accurately
lack of action) has earned them the label of "most
irresponsible buyer" among the entire Spectrum
buyers group. While workers have lost their health
or their lives, Carrefour, is content to hide
behind the Bangladeshi government, knowing full
well that they will not provide these workers
or their families with the income they so desperately
need.
"I don't know how I can arrange money to
buy milk for my six-year-old son, pay his school
fees, or get the money that my mother needs for
her medical treatment," said 30-year-old
Nur-E-Alam, who lost his left arm after waiting
17 hours to be rescued from the rubble at the
Spectrum factory. Like Zarina, his family survives
on loans, explained E-Alam, who visited Europe
in 2006 to push companies into action and to raise
awareness of the desperate situation the Spectrum
families are forced to live in. Recent interviews
with survivors of the Spectrum collapse and families
of the dead revealed that they are struggling
to meet their most basic needs, having trouble
paying for food and rent for simple housing, medical
treatment (including ongoing treatment for injuries
sustained in the collapse), and for the education
of their children.
For years Carrefour as well as Cotton Group,
Steilmann, New Yorker, Bluhmod, and Kirsten Mode
profited from the low prices of the clothes made
by these workers, turning a blind eye to the extremely
bad and unsafe conditions in the Spectrum factory.
It is high time that they pay up.
Action request
The French and Belgian CCC will contact Carrefour
in the coming weeks about their responsibility
to participate in the Spectrum fund. For more
information on these efforts please see: www.vetementspropres.be.
Please contact Cotton Group, Steilmann, Kirsten
Mode, Bluhmod, and New Yorker today to voice your
concerns about the lack of sufficient compensation
provided to the survivors and families of the
dead.
Dear Sir / Madam
Two years have now passed since the Spectrum
garment factory, one of your suppliers in Bangladesh,
collapsed, killing 64 and injuring dozens of workers.
I am contacting you with regard to the desperate
situation that the survivors and families of the
dead now find themselves in. I have been informed
by the Clean Clothes Campaign that since many
of these families have lost their main breadwinner,
they are struggling to put food on the table,
pay the rent on their extremely modest accomodations,
pay school fees for their children or for medical
care, including for those who sustained serious
injuries in the Spectrum collapse. Simply to survive
many families have had to take loans which are
barely sustaining them in extreme poverty and
have also now plunged them into serious debt.
I am saddened to learn that while there has been
some agreement among companies who produced their
garments at Spectrum, to pay into a fund to ensure
an income for these devastated families, your
company has not agreed to take part in this initiative.
How can you turn your back on these families and
not take responsibility for the events that took
place and landed them in this situation?
I am writing to you today to request that without
further delay your company immediately commits
to paying into the fund that other Spectrum clients
have been working to set up. I hope that you will
take the lead of other European retailers sourcing
in Bangladesh and agree to provide support to
the Spectrum families by making this fund operational.
I urge you to make a public statement today committing
to the Spectrum fund and the further steps you
will take to demonstrate responsible action in
the aftermath of this terrible tragedy. Your company
has a role to play in ensuring that the Spectrum
families are able to carry on with their lives.
Sincerely,
[insert name]
Adresses
The Cotton Group
Jean Marc Dath
Managing Director
Chaussée de Namur, 260
B-1495 Marbais
Belgium
E-mail: c/o David Sienaert, Operations Manager
d.sienaert@bc-europeanstyle.com
Bluhmod Köln
Welserstraße 6a
51149 Köln
Germany
E-mail: vertrieb@bluhmod.de
Klaus Steilmann GmbH & Co.KG
z.Hd. Frau Steilmann
Feldstraße 4
44867 Bochum
Germany
E-mail: ute_steilmann@steilmann.com
Kirsten Mode Design
z. Hd. Herrn Pape
Emschermulde 6
45891 Gelsenkirchen
Germany
E-mail: andreas_pape@kirsten-mode.com
New Yorker
z. Hd. Mr. Horn
Hansestraße 48
38112 Braunschweig
Germany
E-mail: whorn@newyorker.de