DHAKA, Bangladesh--Factory owners accused of forcing staff back
to work in a building shortly before it collapsed and killed about
400 people last week were under financial pressure because
political unrest had scared off investors, company executives
said.
The companies lost orders to rival garment makers in other
countries after protests in Bangladesh since February led to
strikes and port blockades ahead of elections next year.
The $20 billion-a-year garment industry had lost $500 million in
export orders due to the earlier turmoil, the Bangladesh Garment
Manufacturers and Exporters Association said this month. Western
buyers had shifted many of those orders to India, it said, warning
that some of the three million jobs in the sector were at risk if
instability continued.
Workers for all five factories in the building said in
interviews they were urged by factory managers Wednesday morning to
return to work at Rana Plaza, in Savar, a commercial hub north of
Dhaka, despite warnings from engineers that an exterior crack on
the building made it unsafe. It collapsed hours later.
Just before last week's disaster, two of the factories--Phantom
Apparels Ltd. and Phantom Tac Ltd.--were rushing to complete an
order from Spanish fast-fashion retailer Mango, said factory
executives who survived the building collapse.
Those two factories, owned by Aminul Islam, a Dhaka-based
businessman, and the other factories had been unable to fill orders
due to the chaos, said the factory executives and trade association
members. When Mr. Islam won a contract with Mango, he was eager to
make it work, the executives said.
"The owner told us that the company had lost $121,000 worth of
orders and Mango, being such a large buyer, was crucial for us,"
said one Phantom executive. "Workers were told not to miss a single
day of work since we were losing so much time due to political
unrest."
Mr. Islam and the owners of the other factories turned
themselves in to police over the weekend after authorities ordered
their arrest for criminal negligence. The building owner is also in
police custody. The men in custody haven't yet been charged.
Lawyers for the men couldn't be reached or declined to comment.
Sayed Shah Jamal, Phantom Apparels' quality-assurance manager,
who was rescued from the wreckage, said of the work for the Mango
contract, "The fabric had just come in, and we were all working
very hard to ship the order before the June deadline."
Documents recovered from the factory site by labor activists and
reviewed by The Wall Street Journal show one order for 35,000 units
of boys' polo shirts and girls' leggings for Mango's autumn-winter
collection.
Phantom Apparels and Phantom Tac, with a total of 10 production
lines between them with 60 seamstresses on each line, were rushing
to complete the order, the executives said.
The factories, which also supplied clothes to other European
retailers, had been audited by Mango executives in October to
determine safety standards and work conditions, one factory
executive said.
"The audit team found some problems and were due to arrive this
month for a follow-up audit," the executive said. "They canceled
the visit due to general strikes in the country."
Mango contradicted the Phantom executives, saying it was in
talks with the factory to place a test order but that it hadn't yet
authorized it to do the work and hadn't yet begun an audit. On
Monday, Mango stood by its earlier statements.
"Even so, notwithstanding the social audit, it would have been
impossible to detect the structural defects of the collapsed
building," the company said.
Other documents recovered from the building site showed the
factory received an order from Italy's Benetton Group SpA through
an Indian agent in August 2012. The order was for 45,000 sleeveless
shirts and 27,000 full-arm shirts.
Benetton initially denied any connection to the factory. But
Monday, after labor groups found Benetton-labeled clothing and
production documents in the rubble, the company acknowledged a
"one-time, subcontracting order that was completed several weeks
ago," a Benetton spokeswoman said.
She said the company had removed the manufacturer from its
supplier list after completing the one-time order "as we found that
the manufacturer no longer met certain of our standards."
Another factory in the building, New Wave Style Ltd., also had
problems with delayed shipments and was facing onerous debt
repayments, said Annisul Huq, a former president of the Bangladesh
garment manufacturers' association.
The factory, owned by Mahbubur Rahman Tapas and Bazlus Samad
Adnan, decided to keep operations going after the warning from
building engineers.
"They were under tremendous pressure to meet shipment
deadlines," Mr. Huq said.
New Wave couldn't be reached for comment.
Other companies that contracted work in the building included
Canadian retailer Loblaw Cos. and Primark, a European budget
fashion chain owned by Associated British Foods.
Both companies said Monday they would pay compensation to
victims of the building collapse and urged other retailers to
follow suit. Primark said payments will be made to injured garment
workers, children who have lost parents and other family members of
the deceased.
"We are fully aware of our responsibility," Primark said. "We
urge these other retailers to come forward and offer
assistance."
Authorities said they detained building owner Sohel Rana on
Sunday as he was allegedly attempting to flee to India on
allegations he built Rana Plaza without acquiring mandatory safety
permits.
The death toll from the accident, after rising rapidly in recent
days, reached about 400 people as of Monday.
Rescuers fear the toll could still rise as the salvage operation
shifts from search and rescue to recovering corpses buried in the
wreckage
Tens of thousands of workers have joined the fray in recent
days, clashing with police, ransacking garment factories and
vandalizing cars. Police have responded with tear gas and rubber
bullets.
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