Many textile and footwear workers do not feel safe at work. Not only do they work in dangerous buildings, but workers are regularly exposed to inhumanely high temperatures, harmful chemicals and physical violence. In this video, testimonies of the collapse of the Rana Plaza, 9 years ago in Savar, Bangladesh, collected by Clean Clothes Campaign that promotes programs to help prevent injuries and deaths at work and appeals to compensate workers involved in accidents that could have been avoided.
The search of the global garment and sportswear industries for the lowest production costs comes at a high price: the health and safety of workers. After more than a century of work as CCC, developing national regulations and international conventions, workers continue to lose their health and lives while stitching our clothes.
World-wide attention on worker safety in the garment industry has grown enormously since three devastating accidents that killed thousands of workers and shook the world: the factory fires of Ali Enterprises in Pakistan and Tazreen Fashions in Bangladesh, both 2012, and the Rana Plaza Collapse in 2013, Bangladesh.
But workers are not only threatened by unsafe buildings. Dangerous practices, such as the unprotected use of chemical substances or sandblasting, continue to be common in the industry. And even workers behind the sewing machine are exposed to health hazards, such as noise, high temperatures and repetitive motion. Fainting is common in factories where workers make long hours without proper ventilation or air conditioning and are paid too little to properly feed themselves. Also workers are subjected to verbal and psychological harassment and violence, especially the majority of women in the industry, who additionally potentially face gender based violence and sexual harassment.