TUAC NEWS
Global unions urge world leaders to elevate example of Bangladesh Accord
30/06/2017
As the G20 prepares to tackle issues such as
fair trade and corporate responsibility in Berlin this weekend,
global unions are calling on summit participants to look to the
recently re-signed Bangladesh Accord on Fire and Building Safety as
a model for promoting sustainable business practices.
Christy Hoffman, Deputy Secretary of UNI Global Union,
said:
The discussion of responsible business practices is incomplete
without a serious look at the Bangladesh Accord’s success and
renewal. Simply put, this model of accountability and transparency
works. The first agreement is saving lives in Bangladesh’s garment
industry, and the 2018 Accord strengthens worker protections by
explicitly acknowledging the role unions play in making work
safe.
IndustriALL General Secretary, Valter Sanches, said:
The legally binding Accord is, at present, the only credible option
for health and safety in Bangladesh garment factories and has saved
lives since its creation. The new agreement puts greater emphasis
on the right of workers to organize and join a union, recognizing
worker empowerment is fundamental to assuring workplace safety. The
Accord can be expanded to other sectors, and as worker
representatives, we urge you to acknowledge the new Accord's
significance as an important step towards responsible global supply
chains.
Trade Union Advisory Committee to the OECD General Secretary
John Evans said:
“The signing of new Accord shows that legally-binding agreement
between brands and unions is a successful model for driving
positive change in global supply chains. The G20 Leaders need to
learn this lesson and give it full support.”
UNI Global Union and IndustriALL Global Union along with more than
20 brands announced a new Bangladesh Accord on Fire and Building
Safety at the OECD Global Forum on
Responsible Business Conduct in Paris on 29 June. Many
more brands are expected to join.
The three-year agreement builds on the achievements of the first
Bangladesh Accord signed in May 2013 in response to the Rana Plaza
building collapse. It continues the first Accord’s ground-breaking
legally binding framework and commitment to transparency. It also
adds new worker protections and ensures that many more factories
will be inspected and renovated, as signatory brands add
suppliers.
The continuation of the Accord shows that binding agreements
between multinational companies and global unions are proven as an
effective means of directly improving working conditions in global
supply chains.
Importantly, it recognizes the role of freedom of association and
trade unions play in improving workplace safety. It includes
enhanced protections for workers whose factories are closed or
relocated due to the implementation of the agreement. It also
presents the possibility to expand the Accord to sectors other than
the readymade garment industry.
The Rana Plaza collapse in April 2013 claimed the lives of more
than 1,100 workers, injuring 2,500 more. Six weeks later, unions,
non-governmental organizations and brands announced the first
Bangladesh Accord. Currently, the Accord covers more than 2.5
million workers. The new Accord goes into effect after the 2013
Accord expires in May 2018.
In May of this year, G20 labour and employment ministers drafted
a declaration on shaping the future world of work that emphasized
“violations of decent work and fundamental principles and rights at
work cannot be part of the competition” within the global supply
chain. This report will be presented in the summit this
weekend.