Arab Times

European clothing brand group for safety leaving Bangladesh

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DHAKA, Bangladesh, Jan 16, (AP): A group set up by European clothing brands that has monitored factory safety in Bangladesh for years plans to leave, with its duties being assumed by a local group including unions and industry figures in the world’s second-largest garment manufactur­er.

The European group and a separate North American group were formed after the collapse of Rana Plaza, a building housing five garment factories that made clothing for internatio­nal brands. The collapse in 2013 killed at least 1,134 people and was one of several fatal accidents in the country’s garment industry that were blamed on safety lapses.

The uproar that followed the collapse prompted about 190 European brands including Marks and Spencer,

H&M, Tesco and Carrefour to form the Accord on Fire and Building Safety in Bangladesh.

Accord’s departure, which officials said Thursday was planned for May, follows a protracted tussle with garment manufactur­ers who wanted Bangladesh’s government to form a local watch group to monitor the sector.

“Accord will be leaving Bangladesh and we are forming a national collaborat­ive council in which brands, unions and industry will be together to monitor factories,” Rubana Huq, president of the Bangladesh Garment Manufactur­ers and Exporters Associatio­n, told The Associated Press. “We are taking over from Accord all of its resources and will follow their protocols but it will be based on the national context.”

The new council will operate within Bangladesh’s regulatory framework and cooperate with the government, a joint statement from the Accord and the BGMEA said Wednesday. “It will retain all health and safety inspection­s and remediatio­n, safety training and complaints handling functions currently carried out by the Accord,” it said.

The Accord existed alongside another monitoring group for North American brands called Alliance. It left the country on Dec 31, 2018, as scheduled after inspecting about 1,000 factories. The Accord’s tenure originally expired in 2018, but the group wanted to stay under some conditions against the will of the government and the garment manufactur­ers. It went to court and obtained an extension until Feb 13, 2020.

The manufactur­ers accused Accord

of recommendi­ng “unnecessar­y and repeated” measures that put pressure on the industry. Accord has inspected 1,650 factories so far and recommende­d remediatio­n work to make them compliant.

Joris Oldenziel, spokesman for the Accord, said Thursday in an email to the AP that the deal “provides the necessary guarantees that the work, key principles and all policies of the Accord will be carried forward and that a sustainabl­e solution has been found to maintain workplace safety in Bangladesh­i garment factories.”

He said the new council and the Accord Foundation in Amsterdam would cooperate closely as required for the implementa­tion and management of the legally binding agreement between brands and unions even after leaving Bangladesh.

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