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Coles suspends Bangladesh brand

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Coles suspends Bangladesh brand

Coles suspends Bangladesh brand

April 7, 2012

With great fanfare, Coles announced last year it would be the first supermarket chain in Australia to bring men's and women's fashions to the grocery aisles. But six months after the Mix clothing label went on sale, Coles has suspended buying from a textile factory in Bangladesh after revelations workers have been beaten, fired and imprisoned in a battle over wages and other rights.

The Institute for Global Labour and Human Rights, a US-based organisation, wrote to Coles managing director Ian McLeod last month, outlining the workers' allegations of gross abuses.

These included below minimum pay rates of 16c to 22c an hour, unpaid overtime and holiday leave, and being forced to work up to 84 hours a week. As well, workers were subjected to ''routine sexual harassment, beatings, mass firing, corporal punishment and imprisonment on false charges.''
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The ''cheap chic'' Mix clothing line, with most items priced under $25, is on sale in 60 of 700 Coles supermarkets.

The institute's director, Charles Kernaghan, told Fairfax the workers were treated like slaves. For example, workers who arrived late could be forced to stand at attention with their arms at their sides for four hours.

Speaking from Bangladesh this week, he said: ''Every single labour law in Bangladesh is being violated. It seems the Chinese owners are trying to implement Chinese labour practices in Bangladesh but the workers wouldn't allow it.''

Trouble flared at the end of January after 50 workers were fired, workers called a sit-down strike, and the head of the Workers' Welfare Association, Helal Uddin, and other leaders were allegedly beaten after they presented a list of 22 demands to the company; two were hospitalised.

Mr Kernaghan said when workers responded by damaging property, one hundred police ''stormed'' the factories. Mr Uddin and other leaders were imprisoned for up to 15 days, hundreds faced false charges, and 291 workers were fired. Further trouble erupted on March 25 after workers were told their piece rates were to be cut; they called a sit down strike, and police clubbed them and used tear gas. Many workers went into hiding.

Coles spokesman Jon Church said the Rosita plant supplied a ''small number''of lines. A third-party auditor had independently audited the supplier before Coles had placed orders with it and ''no significant concerns were identified''. After the institute raised its concerns, Coles arranged for a further audit but had been stymied because management had temporarily closed the factory.

''Coles is not sourcing any further clothing from Rosita and we will not do so until we have completed an independent ethical audit to confirm the status of allegations made about employment standards at that site,'' Mr Church said.

Read more: Coles suspends Bangladesh brand
 
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It is a clean and systematic propaganda...The so called HR did not say how much damage to the property was done and how many garments were shut down due to the so called people those who protested by using the name of the garment worker where 99% is female. Foreign hand was behind that to destroy the garment sector of Bangladesh.
 
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Some days ago same kind of propaganda was being spread out regarding labor harassment of brands like Adidas,Nike,Puma operating in Bangladesh.Though later that false allegation didn't stand a chance, now these factories are busy making sports wear for London Olympic.
 
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:lol:sounds like bollocks to me. Workers have good rights in Bangladesh, especially garment workers in Bangladesh. Even if this story is true, i would like to know the name of the factory, the article didn't publish the name; there is no way a garment owner would do such a thing....sounds like a propaganda!
 
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These r some kind of strategy to down our garment's rise.There is no outrage to any workers.
 
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Conspiracy against Bangladeshi apparel industry

by Srabanti Majumder
April 7, 2012

Click Image to Enlarge

Due to well-orchestrated propaganda against Bangladeshi textile and apparel industry by infamous leftist leader Mushrefa Mishu and her crony named Nicholas William Gomes, one of the biggest international apparel buyers, Coles has suspended buying from a textile factory in Bangladesh after they received propaganda materials from Mushrefa Mishu-William Gomes gangs giving fake information of workers being beaten, fired and imprisoned in a battle over wages and other rights. For years, Mushrefa Mishu and Nicholas William Gomes have been running anti-Bangladesh activities being funded by textile exporters from India and China to damage the export market of Bangladeshi textile products. They are assisted by a number of international organizations, which also are hired by the Sino-Indian textile exporters. Nicholas William Gomes, who is known to law enforcing agencies in Bangladesh as a women trafficker was picked up by Murshrefa Mishu, few months back as her main comrade to run the anti-Bangladesh show. Nicholas William Gomes, an absconder, who went into hiding months back, when a number of criminal allegations brought against him turned true. It is also learnt that Nicholas William Gomes has been shuttling between Bangladesh, India and Nepal on a regular basis, whereas, most of such travels are without any valid travel document.

Justifying the cancellation of orders with Bangladesh apparel exporters, Coles said, the Institute for Global Labor and Human Rights, a US-based organization, wrote to Coles managing director Ian McLeod last month, outlining the workers' allegations of gross abuses. These included below minimum pay rates of 16c to 22c an hour, unpaid overtime and holiday leave, and being forced to work up to 84 hours a week. As well, workers were subjected to "routine sexual harassment, beatings, mass firing, corporal punishment and imprisonment on false charges."

It is also learnt that, Mushrefa Mishu and Nicholas William Gomes gang are currently continuing various propaganda against the Bangladeshi textile and apparel industry with the ulterior motive of turning back a number of top-ranking buyers such as Wal-Mart from buying any product from Bangladesh. The anti-Bangladesh group as well as business rivals are investing significant amount of money on Mushrefa Mishu and Nicholas William Gomes with the ulterior motive of destroying the prospective export market of Bangladeshi products.

Conspiracy against Bangladeshi apparel industry :: Weekly Blitz
 
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^^^^ so your all weather friend China behind this ????
 
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^^^^ so your all weather friend China behind this ????

Nicholas William Gomes has been shuttling between Bangladesh, India and Nepal on a regular basis, whereas, most of such travels are without any valid travel document.
 
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Someone get this Spanish monkey gomes assassinated. :sniper:
 
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:lol:sounds like bollocks to me. Workers have good rights in Bangladesh, especially garment workers in Bangladesh. Even if this story is true, i would like to know the name of the factory, the article didn't publish the name; there is no way a garment owner would do such a thing....sounds like a propaganda!

The name is likely Rostila knitwears...
 
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Well it maybe troubled factory, right now the garment industry is going very slow and lack of of orders. Maybe the mill. Workers were not regularly paid, so they got rowdy violent and the management retaliated. Management's side is not being published in this report.
 
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Executive Summary

The Chinese-owned Rosita Knitwears and Megha Textile (Megatex) factories in Bangladesh produce sweatshop sweaters for:

- Peek&Cloppenburg, Van Graaf - Germany
- British Home Stores /Arcadia Group - United Kingdom
- Coles / Wesfarmers - Australia
- Dressmann/Varner Group - Norway
- Celio - France
- de Bijenkorf - Netherlands
- Fynch-Hatton - Germany
- Smart Set / Reitmans - Canada (produced in 2010 and part of 2011)

Five thousand workers toil under harsh and illegal sweatshop conditions.
Workers paid a starvation wage of 16 to 22 cents an hour.
All overtime is forced-routine, seven-day, 84-hour work weeks.
Workers are beaten, threatened, stripped of their rights and imprisoned on false charges. Hundreds of workers have been fired.
Chinese managers may be cheating the poor Bangladeshi workers of over $1 million a year-through underpayment of overtime hours alone. (Not one single worker is paid the legal overtime premium.)
Corporal punishment is the norm: Workers arriving late are forced to stand at attention, with their arms at their sides, for at least four hours. They cannot talk, turn their head or go to the bathroom.
Management also cheats the workers of their legal vacation pay, which may total some $535,000 over the last three years.
Every labor law in Bangladesh is routinely, systematically and grossly violated.
All International Labour Organization internationally recognized worker rights standards-freedom of association, the right to form a union and bargain collectively, and freedom from forced labor-are also blatantly violated on a daily basis.
The international labels must immediately intervene to end the gross violations and restore the rule of law.

ROSITA KNITWEAR IS OWNED BY THE CHINESE AND RUN BY THE CHINESE, IT IS CLEARLY A MISHANDLING OF BANGLADESHIS BY THE CHINESE OWNERS

Chinese Sweatshop in Bangladesh - Institute for Global Labour and Human Rights
 
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