[Much of the finger-pointing has centered on the question
of what responsibility global brands should bear for accidents that occur in
the factories that produce their garments. Some brands have been concerned that
agreeing to participate in a compensation fund for Rana
Plaza victims could be interpreted as an admission of guilt
and become a vulnerability if litigation arises.]
By Jim Yardely
A facility in
contributed toward a $40
million goal. Samuel Aranda for The New York Times
|
The collapse of the Rana
Plaza building on April 24, killing more than 1,100 workers,
was the deadliest disaster in the history of the garment industry. It focused
global attention on the unsafe working conditions in some Bangladeshi
factories, the rock-bottom wages earned by workers, and the lack of
accountability and oversight in the supply chains for many global brands.
Compensating the victims has been an especially
complicated issue, involving months of negotiations among clothing companies,
labor groups, Bangladesh ’s government and Bangladeshi factory owners. Those
negotiations produced the Rana Plaza Donors Trust Fund, which on
Sunday night reported the names of the first five companies to contribute: El
Corte Inglés; Inditex, which includes the brand Zara; Loblaw; Mango; and
Mascot.
On Monday, labor groups in Bangladesh are expected to hold public events to draw attention to
the hardships faced by Rana Plaza victims with the anniversary of the accident two months
away. Ineke Zeldenrust, the international coordinator of the Clean Clothes Campaign,
a European anti-sweatshop group, said labor groups were also pushing for companies
like Walmart, Children’s Place and Benetton — which have been linked to Rana
Plaza — to make contributions so that payments can begin as soon as possible.
Dan Rees, a representative of the International Labor Organization, which is
managing the fund, said formulas and a claims process had been established to
pay lost wages, medical bills and other compensation to the roughly 4,000
victims, including survivors of the factory collapse, those who were injured
and the families of the dead.
“The significance of this is we have a mechanism that the
whole industry can support,” Mr. Rees said. “We haven’t been able to say that
before. What we had before was the blame game.”
Much of the finger-pointing has centered on the question
of what responsibility global brands should bear for accidents that occur in
the factories that produce their garments. Some brands have been concerned that
agreeing to participate in a compensation fund for Rana
Plaza victims could be interpreted as an admission of guilt
and become a vulnerability if litigation arises.
Mr. Rees said the Donors Trust Fund was designed so that
donations are voluntary and do not imply any legal responsibility for the
accident. Moreover, the fund is open to any company, organization or
individual, meaning that brands not linked to the Rana
Plaza factories can also contribute. Donations can be public
or anonymous.
It was not yet clear how much money the five companies
had contributed. This week, the fund is expected to make public how much money
has been collected and to then keep a running tally.
Among those five companies, Mango, a Spanish brand, had
initially signaled that it would not pay compensation. In the months after the
accident, company executives argued that Mango had placed only a sample order
with a factory inside Rana Plaza , and that work on the order had not yet begun, thus
absolving the brand of responsibility.
In December, The New York Times
reported that work had already begun on the Mango order, citing
interviews with factory supervisors and workers. “There was an urgency among
the bosses,” said one of the workers, Mohammed Mosharuf Hossain. “The managers
told us to finish the Mango products urgently. They said if we could finish
this work quickly, we might get more orders from Mango.”
In an interview on Friday, a representative for Mango
confirmed that the company would contribute to help the victims but
characterized the fund as having a “charitable background” and said the money
should not be considered compensation. Nor had the company changed its position
on its relationship to the factories in Rana
Plaza , the representative said.
“We reassert and reaffirm our initial position,” the
representative said.
Ms. Zeldenrust applauded Mango and the others that had
agreed to pay into the fund but said more brands also must contribute to reach
$40 million, the estimated amount deemed necessary to provide full
compensation. She said two other retailers, Primark and Bonmarché, had signaled
their intent to contribute, and Primark has already spent more than $3 million
for short-term assistance to victims. But Ms. Zeldenrust argued that many
others, including those not linked directly to Rana
Plaza , must pitch in.
“It is a $48 billion industry worldwide,” she said. “This
is nothing.”
PASHUPATINATH READIES FOR MAHASHIVARATRI PILGRIM RUSH
[To make it easy for the devotees to offer their donations, the State Bank of India and the Nepal Investment Bank have set up counters and ATM vending machines inside the temple, he added.]
IANS
KATHMANDU:
Around 700,000 Hindu devouts from India and Nepal are expected to visit the
Pashupatinath temple here on Feb 27 to celebrate Mahashivaratri, a major Hindu
festival.
One
of the major attractions of the festival are the Indian 'Naga babas' who remain
nude and offer puja in their typical manner to Lord Shiva, one of the Trinity
that dominates the Hindu religion.
"We
are expecting around 700,000 Hindu devotees from India and Nepal to visit the
Pashupatinath temple this year during the Mahashivaratri festival,"
Govinda Tandan, member-secretary of the Pashupati Area Development Trust, told
IANS.
Among
them around 5,000 sadhus and babas from various places of India will arrive
here for the auspicious day, Tandan said.
A
group of Indian artists will also perform various musical and religious shows
during the festivities.
The
only problem that the temple authorities are facing is how to handle the long
serpentine queues of devotees.
However,
Tandan said those who want to skip the long queues can pay Nepali Rupees 1,000
(around 625 Indian rupees) and offer their prayers within minutes.
Tandan
said millions of rupees are collected on that particular day with many devotees
also offering gold and other precious metals.
To
make it easy for the devotees to offer their donations, the State Bank of India
and the Nepal Investment Bank have set up counters and ATM vending machines
inside the temple, he added.
"The
saints, sages and babas have started arriving in Kathmandu," Tandan said.
"To
keep a close watch on people, to manage security and other logistic
arrangements, we are deploying around 3,000 security personnel and 10,000
volunteers," he added.