Garment worker dies after protests


Bangladeshi security personnel charge to disperse garment workers protesting after the Minimum Wage Board authority declared the minimum wage of 12,500 taka for garment workers. Police fired rubber bullets and tear gas at protesters when thousands of Bangladesh garment workers rejected the wage hike. – AFP pic, November 12, 2023.

HUNDREDS of Bangladeshi garment workers rallied today demanding fair wages after dismissing a pay offer as too small, as the death toll from the violent protests that erupted last month rose to four.

Police said Jalal Uddin,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 yesterday.

Uddin’s death takes the number killed in the protests to four, police said.

“He died at the Dhaka Medical College Hospital. He was injured during a protest several days ago,” police inspector Bacchu Mia said.

Uddin’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.

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 (RM982.70). Scores of factories have been damaged.

Bangladesh’s 3,500 garment factories account for around 85% of its US$55 billion (RM258.1 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.

A government-appointed panel raised the sector’s wage by 56.25% on Tuesday to 12,500 taka, but garment workers have rejected the hike. Since the pay offer, their protests escalated with at least 70 factories ransacked. – AFP, November 12, 2023.


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