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US suspends Bangladesh trade privileges after garment industry disaster

US suspends Bangladesh trade privileges after garment industry disaster - image

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama announced Thursday the suspension of U.S. trade privileges for Bangladesh because of concerns over labour rights and worker safety that intensified after hundreds died there in the global garment industry’s worst accident.

In a proclamation, Obama said Bangladesh was not taking steps to afford internationally recognized worker rights to employees in the South Asian country.

U.S. Trade Representative Mike Froman said the U.S. will, however, start new discussions with Bangladesh on improving workers’ conditions so the duty-free benefits that cover some 5,000 products can be restored. He didn’t say when that might be, noting that it would depend on Bangladesh’s actions.

Bangladesh’s Foreign Ministry called the suspension “harsh” and had been taken despite its concrete actions to improve factory safety.

Read more: Hundreds of bodies pulled from rubble of Bangladesh garment factory still unidentified.

Thursday’s announcement was the culmination of a yearslong review of labour conditions in the impoverished country. Democratic lawmakers have been pushing for the step since the April 24 collapse of Rana Plaza in Dhaka that killed 1,129 people. In November, a fire at a garment factory killed more than 100 people.

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“The recent tragedies that needlessly took the lives of over 1,200 Bangladeshi garment factory workers have served to highlight some of the serious shortcomings in worker rights and workplace safety standards in Bangladesh,” Froman said.

The Generalized System of Preferences, which is designed to boost the economies of developing nations, covers less than 1 per cent of Bangladesh’s nearly $5 billion in exports to the U.S., its largest market. The benefits don’t cover the lucrative garment sector but Bangladesh’s government was anxious to keep them.

The action may not exact a major and immediate economic toll, but it carries a reputational cost and might deter American companies from investing in the country, one of the world’s poorest.

Watch: A woman who survived for 17 days under the rubble of a collapsed building in Bangladesh is released from the hospital.

The U.S. action, which takes effect in 60 days, also may sway a decision by the European Union, which is considering withdrawing GSP privileges. EU action could have a much bigger economic impact, as its duty-free privileges cover garments, which account for 60 per cent of Bangladesh’s exports in that sector.

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The U.S. Trade Representative review of labour conditions in Bangladesh follows a petition filed in 2007 by the AFL-CIO seeking withdrawal of the GSP benefits. The review was expedited late last year amid concern from U.S. lawmakers over deadly industrial accidents, deteriorating labour rights and the April 2012 killing of prominent labour activist Aminul Islam – a case that has not been solved.

Read more: US Senate puts spotlight on Bangladesh labour conditions

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Froman said despite close engagement with Bangladesh to encourage labour reforms, the U.S. hadn’t seen sufficient progress. But he said the U.S. was “committed to working with the government of Bangladesh to take the actions necessary to rejoin the program.” Steps it wants to see include passage of an amended labour law and other steps to enhance workers’ rights and worker safety, Froman said.

Defending its record, Bangladesh said it was amending the labour law and a ministerial committee has been formed to ensure compliance by garment factories.

“Bangladesh hopes that the U.S. administration would soon bring back Bangladesh’s GSP status, a benefit a least-developed country is supposed to receive in developed countries as per the provisions of the World Trade Organization,” the Foreign Ministry statement said.

House and Senate Democrats who had been calling for the U.S. benefits to be curtailed quickly welcomed Thursday’s decision.

Rep. Joe Crowley, D-N.Y., who is co-chairman of the congressional caucus on Bangladesh, said that in light of recent tragedies in the country, the suspension was “inevitable.”

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“I hope this action will propel Bangladeshi officials to develop a clear path forward that protects all workers in Bangladesh,” he said.

Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said it was long overdue for Bangladesh to change its labour practices and ensure workers’ rights.

“Bangladesh is an important trading partner, but we cannot and will not look the other way while workers are subjected to unsafe conditions and environments endangering their well0being,” Menendez said in a statement.

He also called for American companies operating in Bangladesh to improve conditions for factory workers and work with European companies on a global standard for safety.

Lawmakers have criticized U.S. retailers that source garments from Bangladesh for not joining the more than 40 mostly European companies that have adopted a five-year, legally binding contract that requires them to help pay for fire safety and building improvements. The Bangladeshi garment manufacturers’ association says it stepping up inspections and has closed 20 factories.

The garment industry employs some 4 million people in Bangladesh, 80 per cent of them women.

Read more: Bangladesh says 7 failed to check doomed factories

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