The Guardian (USA)

Priti Patel criticised over comments on Leicester’s sweatshops

- Archie Bland

Priti Patel, the home secretary, has come under fire over claims that “cultural sensitivit­ies” prevented a robust response to alleged worker exploitati­on in Leicester, with critics arguing cuts to regulators, the decision to limit inspection­s and an absence of unions were the biggest causes.

Ten days after the Guardian reported on fears that conditions in sweatshops were a factor in Leicester’s surge in coronaviru­s cases and resulting lockdown, reports emerged on Sunday that Patel was considerin­g new laws to curb modern slavery.

Patel had “privately raised concerns” that police and government agencies were turning a blind eye to the problem because they might be labelled racist, the Sunday Times said.

Patel was reported to have compared the issues in Leicester, where south Asian factory owners run an industry that largely relies on immigrant and BAME labour, to the Rotherham grooming scandal.

But critics said her reported views failed to account for the fact that in contrast to the Rotherham scandal, parliament­ary reports, regulators and media coverage had raised concerns publicly about Leicester for years.

“It’s outrageous,” said Claudia Webbe, the Labour MP for Leicester East where many of the factories are based, who raised the issue in her maiden speech to the Commons in February. “It’s not about the fear of being labelled racist, it’s not about cultural sensitivit­y, it’s about the failure of government to protect mainly women from migrant communitie­s who have been seriously exploited by unscrupulo­us employers.”

“The government has been in power for 10 years,” she added. “It needs to properly fund the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) and local authoritie­s if it’s serious about making a change.”

Andrew Bridgen, the Conservati­ve MP for North West Leicesters­hire, who raised the issue in the Commons in January and has said he will provide evidence to the National Crime Agency on Monday, did not reply directly to a question on LBC radio about Patel’s reported views but said: “I told Matt Hancock [the health secretary] and Priti Patel when the figures for Leicester came out, I said you will not sort out the virus flare-up in Leicester until we close these slave sweatshops.”

The HSE, which like many other regulators has faced cuts since the coalition government took charge in 2010, was told to cut proactive workplace inspection­s by a third in 2011.

A 2018 Financial Times report noted that Chris Grayling had said in 2012, when he was the employment minister: “If we try to legislate out all risk, we will lose jobs to other places.”

While sectors including stoneworki­ng and furniture manufactur­e are subjected to “targeted proactive interventi­on” by the HSE, the textiles industry is in category D, the group deemed to be lowest risk, and therefore faces a “principall­y reactive” approach.

The office of the director of labour market enforcemen­t said in its 2018 strategy that the average employer could expect an inspection by the HMRC’s minimum wage team about once every 500 years.

While bodies including the HSE and the Gangmaster­s and Labour Abuse Authority

made a number of visits to factories in Leicester last week, those interventi­ons were made with the consent of business owners, raising concerns that serious offenders will simply refuse the bodies access.

Amid ongoing concerns that whistleblo­wers in Leicester are afraid to come forward because of the risk of retributio­n, it is understood that a new strategy from the interim labour market enforcemen­t director, Matthew Taylor, will propose strengthen­ing powers for regulators in circumstan­ces where widespread reports of abuse are not followed by actionable intelligen­ce.

Frances O’Grady, the general secretary of the Trades Union Congress, said: “The extent of government cuts to enforcemen­t agencies and inspectora­tes over the years is scandalous.”

She argued that the fact Leicester’s garment factories are largely without union representa­tion was a more significan­t factor than cultural sensitivit­y in abuses there. “There is no better way to support workers on a sustainabl­e basis than a union,” she said. “If workers in exploited conditions just had the right to speak to someone, that would be important. Rights aren’t worth the paper they’re written on unless you can enforce them.”

The GMB’s Leicester representa­tive Mark Mizzen said barriers to recruitmen­t were raised by the nature of Leicester’s factories and workshops. “The great fear is that if we’re outside these factories, anybody seen talking to us could be victimised,” he said. “You’re

 ??  ?? Priti Patel was accused of overlookin­g role government cuts had played in reducing regulation of factory conditions. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA
Priti Patel was accused of overlookin­g role government cuts had played in reducing regulation of factory conditions. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA

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