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Bangladesh more than doubles garment workers' monthly minimum wage to $113

@IndianLite

Neelsagar dada is a real sweetheart, but I dont know what comes over him when he discusses SHW

Regards

His family are low rung BNP cadres.

In Bangladesh civil service jobs are awarded based on political affiliation.

Thanks to BAL crookedness a generation of BNP cadres have been sidelined.

BNP will ofcourse return the favour in spades 🤣🤣

Like it did previously.
 
Hasina is a Sufi Muslim. She is not a

What did you personally learn from Bangladeshi education system?

Your education was completed long before Hasina.

And yet! Your English is appalling and had to get a hard hat job with the japs!!

Who is to blame for your poor education?
Do you live in a fantasy world thinking Hasina the Butcher as a Sufi? She is not even a human being.

It is time that she left.

@IndianLite

Neelsagar dada is a real sweetheart, but I dont know what comes over him when he discusses SHW

Regards
Your SHW is a bitch who should be beheaded for conspiring with India to kill 57 military officers.

We know why she is liked by Indians.

@IndianLite

Neelsagar dada is a real sweetheart, but I dont know what comes over him when he discusses SHW

Regards
Your SHW is a bitch who should be beheaded for conspiring with India to kill 57 military officers.

We know why she is liked by Indians.
 
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How does a single worker generate that much profit ? I am looking at the exchange rate and price of apparel, It does not add up
Have you seen the price of a shirt at Nieman Marcus or Saks Fifth Avenue? They can afford to pay ten times more to the garment workers.
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His family are low rung BNP cadres.

In Bangladesh civil service jobs are awarded based on political affiliation.

Thanks to BAL crookedness a generation of BNP cadres have been sidelined.

BNP will ofcourse return the favour in spades 🤣🤣

Like it did previously.
Do not talk like an idiot about my link. Unlike you guys, I am from so low a family that no party would count us in.

I talk about the country’s future and you guys believe in cultism centered on a single political party or a single personality.
 
130 garments is already closed! Hazrat Sheikh Hasina wazed has found a new way to deceive common people!


He is quoting the rate at illegal hundi markets.
As long as hundi gives people more money , it's not illegal! It's infact more legal than Bank channels of "Illegal Hazrat sheikh Hasina wazed regime!"

A govt that can't pay people accordingly via so called legal channels , indeed people will choose another legal way!

Illegal act is taking loan , making some infrastructures , and stealing money from these projects!

@IndianLite
 
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Rather than minimum salary owners should introduce profit sharing for the workers. It’s a win win scenario for all. Workers will work hard for profit, owners will have no obligation to pay higher minimum wages and government will get more tax revenue as garments owners with under and over invoicing hide actual income which may not be possible in this case as workers will keep an eye on it for getting a share from profit.

The minimum salary should be competitive compared to other RMG producing countries, otherwise Bangladesh will loose market share. Alternative is to move to higher value product producing.
You are talking profit sharing socialism that does not work even in China, Cuba or Russia.

Consider the mindset of our Golden Bangladesh people. Who will be doing all those account checking and back checking to find out the real profit?
 
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Bangladesh unrest leaves another garment worker dead

AFP
November 13, 2023

People try to douse a fire inside a bus allegedly torched by protesters during a nationwide transport blockade called by an opposition party, in Dhaka on Sunday.—AFP

People try to douse a fire inside a bus allegedly torched by protesters during a nationwide transport blockade called by an opposition party, in Dhaka on Sunday.—AFP

DHAKA: Hundreds of Bangladeshi garment workers rallied on Sunday, demanding fair wages after dismissing a pay offer as too small, as the death toll from the violent protests rose to four.

Jalaluddin, 42, a garment worker who was injured in clashes with officers earlier this month in Gazipur, north of the capital Dhaka, died from his injuries. His death takes the number killed in the protests to four, according to police officials.

“He died at the Dhaka Medical College Hospital. He was injured during a protest several days ago,” said police inspector Bacchu Mia. Jalal’s brother-in-law Rezaul Karim told reporters he had been shot in the stomach by a shotgun, and had been brought to Dhaka for treatment.

Police said over 10,000 workers left their shifts when at least nine factories were shut down for the day in Dhaka’s northern Mirpur neighbourhood on Sunday morning. “Some 500 of these workers tried to block a road as part of the minimum wage protests. There was no violence,” police inspector Masud Sarker insisted.

Many go into hiding amid police crackdown on protesters

Unions have accused the government of launching a crackdown against protesters and of targeting grass-roots organisers.

Amirul Haque Amin, the leader of the National Garment Workers Federation, said many protesters have gone into hiding.

At least 122 people, including several organisers, have been arrested in Gazipur since the protests began, the town’s police spokesman Ibrahim Khan said.

Police have filed cases against 11,000 unidentified people over the attacks on factories including Tusuka, one of the largest plants based in Gazipur.

Bangladesh has been rocked by the worst labour unrest in a decade with tens of thousands of workers clashing with police, demanding a near-tripling of the minimum wage to 23,000 taka ($208). Scores of factories have been damaged.

Around 3,500 garment factories in the country account for around 85 percent of its $55 billion in annual exports, supplying many of the world’s top brands including Levi’s, Zara and H&M. But conditions are dire for many of the sector’s four million workers, the vast majority of whom are women whose monthly pay, until recently, started at 8,300 taka ($75).
 
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US moves to break political impasse in Bangladesh

AFP

Photo: AFP

Photo: AFP

DHAKA: The US ambassador to Bangladesh has sought meetings with leaders of the country’s three major parties, the embassy said Monday, as Washington seeks to break a political impasse ahead of elections.

Dhaka is set to hold a general election in January, but the main opposition, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), and its allies have said they will boycott the vote unless Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina quits power and lets a neutral government oversee the polls.

Hasina has launched a major crackdown against the BNP since police broke up a giant opposition rally on October 28. Police have arrested more than 11,000 BNP activists and almost all its top leaders since then, the party said.

The US embassy said ambassador Peter Haas “has requested meetings with senior officials in all three major political parties”, as violence gripped the country with the opposition enforcing two weeks of strikes.

“The United States wants free and fair elections conducted in a peaceful manner and calls on all sides to eschew violence and exercise restraint,” the embassy added.

The US move comes just days before the country’s election commission is expected to announce the day of the polls.

“It’s a formal and direct move from the United States to break the political impasse ahead of next general elections,” Mohammad Tanzimuddin Khan, a professor of international relations at Dhaka University, told AFP.

“It’s an effort by the United States to find a solution to the ongoing political crisis. This time they’ve given their role a formal shape by urging all three major parties for unconditional dialogues,” he said.

There was no immediate comment from the three major political parties including the ruling Awami League, the BNP and the third largest, Jatiya Party.

But early this month, Hasina ruled out any dialogue with the BNP. “Who would ask for talks with these beasts?” she said.

It was not clear who would represent the BNP in the dialogue, as almost its entire top leadership has been arrested.

The BNP said at least 11,250 of its activists and leaders have been arrested by police since October 28.

They include Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, who has led the party after its chairperson was jailed and the acting chief was exiled.

Police have not given any nationwide arrest figures. But Dhaka Metropolitan Police (DMP) said it arrested 2,000 BNP activists and leaders since October 28.

Police said at least four protesters and one police officer have been killed in the clashes. The BNP claims 13 people have died from the violence.

Hasina has overseen phenomenal economic growth during her 15 years in power but Western nations have sounded the alarm over democratic backsliding.
 
Hasina has overseen phenomenal economic growth during her 15 years in power but Western nations have sounded the alarm over democratic backsliding.
How about USA's concern over massive corruption by the government and its oligarchs?
 

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