One Year Down, Not Much Has Changed In Bangladesh Factories

International Business Times

Published Apr 24, 2014 08:14AM ET

Updated Apr 24, 2014 10:00AM ET

One Year Down, Not Much Has Changed In Bangladesh Factories

By Angelo Young - A year after the garment factory collapse in Bangladesh that took the lives of 1,129 people triggered a debate about the developed world’s responsibility to protect the safety and health of workers supplying it with low-priced clothes, not much has changed despite a few signs of measurable progress.

In the wake of the accident the Bangladeshi government announced its commitment to ensuring safe workplaces in the country’s single most important industry, employing over 4 million people, each earning about $9 a week. And some multinational companies, under attack for ignoring safety concerns for the sake of cheap labor, vowed to aid victims’ families and fund efforts to audit factories to make sure they comply with fire safety and structural integrity codes.

Amid the rubble of the eight-story Rana Plaza building, rescue workers found garment labels from some of the world’s biggest retailers including Italy’s Benetton Group, Wal-Mart Stores Inc. NYSE:WMT from the United States, Bonmarche Holdings PLC (LON:BON) of the UK, El Corte Inglés S.A., based in Madrid.