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DCC launches one stop textile printing solution

DCC Print Vision LLP, with a vision of capacity building and making expertise in the textile printing industry, made a world class printing studio in Banani, Dhaka.Customers will get one stop solution of digital, sublimation and screen print, said a press release issued on Tuesday.”The opportunities of textile printing industries are huge in Bangladesh but there is no one stop solution provider. Due to continuous request of Bangladesh textile industries they have decided to launch their operation in Bangladesh. We have also pioneered in setting an up world class textile printing studio here” the press release quoted DCC Country Manager H N Ashiqur Rahman as saying on the occasion.Ashiq has seasoned experience in textile industries from last 12 years working with leading multinational companies and who is a Marketing postgraduate from Dhaka University.

Retail group approves Bangladesh factories as safety concerns persist: Report finds

retail group approves bangladesh factories as safety concerns persist: report finds

An organisation backed by global retailers including Gap, Target and Walmart is giving passing grades to Bangladeshi factories that have yet to implement life-saving safety changes the retailers pledged to put in place following a deadly building collapse in 2013 that killed 1,137 people, according to a new report published Monday. The Guardian has been given an exclusive preview of the first independent systematic survey of the Bangladeshi garment factories used by the Alliance consortium of retailers set up after the deadly Rana Plaza factory collapse that triggered a global consumer backlash against major retailers. Three and a half years after the building collapse, the authors conclude that the factories that provide clothes to some of the biggest names in retail have so far failed to implement key renovations by their own mandated deadlines and that:

    62% still lack viable fire exits;

    62% do not have a properly functioning fire alarm system;

    47% have major, uncorrected structural problems.

The report concludes that in some cases, once firm deadlines for repairs and improvements set for 2014 and 2015 were scrapped to be replaced with a 2018 deadline that coincides with the end of the Alliance arrangement. The Alliance disputed the report’s findings, saying it relied on inaccurate and outdated information. James Moriarty, country director for the Alliance for Bangladesh Worker Safety, said he was “totally confident” that the factories would meet retailers’ standards by 2018, when the agreement ends. The fatal collapse of the Rana Plaza factory in Savar, Bangladesh, in April 2013 is considered the world’s worst garment factory disaster. The disaster highlighted the hazardous working conditions in Bangladesh’s garment industry and prompted promises of change from retailers including Gap, H&M, Walmart and others. In the wake of the tragedy, retailers formed two groups to address safety issues in Bangladesh. The first, Accord on Fire and Building Safety in Bangladesh, is led by H&M and backed by Adidas, Benetton, Marks & Spencer, Tesco and others. The signatories agreed to a legally binding agreement in accordance with local and international unions and to publish detailed public reporting of its progress. Walmart declined to sign on to the Accord and founded the Alliance for Bangladesh Worker Safety, a voluntary organization whose members include Gap; Target; Hudson’s Bay Company, whose brands include Saks Fifth Avenue and Lord & Taylor; and VF Corporation, whose brands include North Face, Timberland, Vans and Wrangler. The Alliance has not publish detailed reports of its progress. The new report, titled Dangerous Delays on Worker Safety, was compiled by the International Labour Rights Forum, the Worker Rights Consortium, the Clean Clothes Campaign and the Maquila Solidarity Network. It identified 175 factories which supply both Accord and Alliance’s signatories. Using Accord’s detailed progress accounts from factories that also produce garments for Alliance members, the authors compiled a progress report looking at status reports for more than 2,000 required safety renovations across 350 spreadsheets of data. The report found of the 107 factories labelled as being “on track” by the Alliance, 99 were still falling behind in one or more safety categories. “The Alliance has never offered any justification for the decision to ignore its own safety deadlines. Nor has the Alliance explained why it is responsible to allow factories four years to carry out life-saving renovations that should have been completed in less than one, while still labeling those factories as ‘On Track’,” the authors of the report write. In a letter to the report’s authors, Moriarty explained the Alliance’s decision to change its deadlines for renovations. “With respect to the Alliance’s metrics for categorizing a factory’s progress, we have adjusted our measurements to reflect the core question of whether a given factory will be substantially safe when the Alliance sunsets in 2018,” he wrote. Moriarty questioned the report’s methodology. He told the Guardian he regularly met with Accord partners “and never has anything like this been raised about us falling behind on remediation issues”. Moriarty said the two organisations now split the assessment of factories when both parties used the same facilities and while he conceded Accord members received regular updates, he said he was “confused” by the assertion that “folks sending emails once a month is more reliable than having trained engineers inspect factories and reporting their findings”. “I trust my engineers. They are not lying to me and I am not lying when I put things down on paper,” he said. “We in the Alliance are doing something that has never been done before. We are taking an existing industry that is seriously flawed and trying to correct it from scratch,” he said. “The assertion that we could get all this done in one year is frankly ludicrous to anyone who has an engineering or safety background and understands the past state or the current state of the industry.” Scott Nova, executive director of the Worker Rights Consortium, defended the report’s methodology. He said Accord staff were well aware of any changes in status and regularly in contact with factory managers before they updated their reports. “What would be their incentive not to report progress?” he said. The report argues the lack of progress “is placing the lives of thousands of workers in jeopardy”. The authors calculate some 120,000 garment workers employed in the 62 factories that produce items for Walmart do not have fully viable fire exit systems. Another 55,000 people are employed in factories making clothes for Gap that had compromised fire exits, the report found. The issues persist even though 96% of the factories in the sample were inspected well over two years ago, the authors write. While the group has also been critical of Accord factories, Nova said the H&M-led group had moved to address issues more quickly than the Alliance group and credited their greater transparency for the difference. In a significant move to improve transparency, Moriarty said that from January all information from each of the Alliance’s visits would be published on the Fair Factories Clearinghouse (FFC) website, the same system that the Accord uses. Nova said two main factors were contributing to the lack of progress: retailers were not putting enough pressure on factory owners to make improvements, and they were not contributing enough money to help the factory owners make the repairs. The average cost of implementing the promised safety renovations is between $400,000 and $500,000. “What motivated Walmart and Target to do the right thing is public embarrassment. We are three and a half years on [from Rana Plaza] and they assume memories are fading,” said Nova. “This data set, if anything, overstates progress. I’m not saying that nothing has been done – it’s just that this work should have been done a long time ago and you still have issues that could lead to fatalities,” he said.

Vietnam unlikely to meet 10pc export growth target in 2016

vietnam textiles & garments

Vietnam is unlikely to meet 10-percent export growth target in 2016, according to Vietnamese trade minister on Monday. In the first ten months of this year, Vietnam’s total export value reached 143.9 billion U.S. dollars, a year-on-year increase of 7 percent, reports Xinhua.Of this sum, the agro-forestry-fishery sector had a breakthrough growth in export value at 7.9 percent to 18.3 billion U.S. dollars, while in first ten months of 2015, the sector saw a year-on-year reduction of 9.7 percent, Industry and Trade Minister Tran Tuan Anh was quoted by the state-run news agency VNA as saying.However, the 10-percent target will not be met because unstable politics in key export markets have reduced demand and prices, said the minister.Anh attributed the missed target to some major factors. Firstly, Vietnamese goods are facing tougher competition by other exporting countries which have promoted solutions to increase exports.Secondly, importers of Vietnamese goods have applied technical barriers and increased demands regarding the quality of imports, especially farming and fishery products, while disadvantages in weather have also affected the supply and quality of these products.Thirdly, Vietnamese supply industries are not strong enough for key export industrial products, such as mobile phones, textiles, garments, leather and footwear. The country must depend on imports of material for production, leaving Vietnam’s export products susceptible to price fluctuations of raw materials on the world market.In order to solve these problems, the ministry would focus on implementing effective trade promotion programs for export products facing difficulties in price and market. The ministry will also build trademarks for some key export products such as textiles, seafood, fruits and rice to enhance their competitiveness, said Anh.

341 workers killed in 226 workplace accidents in 10 months

341 workers killed in 226 workplace accidents in 10 months

At least 341 workers were killed in 226 workplace incidents in last 10 months from January to October of this year, said a report on Monday. Labour rights organisations — Safety and Rights Society and Bangladesh Legal Aid and Services Trust — jointly unveiled the report in a press conference held at Dhaka Reporters’ Unity. Speakers said monitoring 26 newspapers—15 national and 11 local they have prepared the report where they have observed that no remarkable initiative to ensure workplace safety was taken within the last ten years. All these accidents happened in 53 districts, most causalities were reported in Dhaka 69 workers, in Gazipur 62 workers, said the speakers mentioning that moreover a huge number of incidents were not noticed. ‘If all could be included in the book, the real number will be much higher,’ said Safety and Rights Society executive director Sekender Ali Mina in the press conference held marking four years of Tazreen Fashions fire at Ashulia in 2012 where at least 114 workers were killed. He said most of the causalities were reported due to electrocution – 87 workers and then the factory fire incidents– 62 workers. Since 2007, at least 4,613 workers were killed where 556 workers were killed in factory fire incidents. He blamed lack of punitive actions and proper monitoring of government agencies for the incidents. BLAST, project manager Abdul Malek, SRS advocate and legal officer Hasina Khanam were present among others in the programme.

Tampaco owner, family surrender seeking bail

tampaco

Tampaco Foils Limited owner, his wife, son and daughter surrendered to the High Court on Monday seeking bail in two cases filed for the fire at the factory at Tongi that killed 39 people on September 10. The bench of Justice AKM Asaduzzaman and Justice Zafar Ahmed adjourned till 3:00pm today the hearing in the petition filed by eight people including Tampaco chairman Mokbul Hossain, his wife Sajeda Pervin, his son Syed Tanvir Hossain, also Tampaco managing director, and daughter Abida Parvin, also a director, Abida’s husband Shafi Sami, also deputy managing director. The eight surrendered to the court more than two months after two murder cases were filed for the factory fire against the factory owners and officials including Mokbul Hossain, also former Bangladesh Nationalist Party lawmaker. Father of a deceased worker of the factory and a sub-inspector of Tongi police station filed the cases on September 1 and 17 respectively. A devastating fire raged through Tampaco Foils factory in Tongi BSCIC Industrial area early September 10 that left at least 39 people, mostly Tampaco workers killed, 10 workers missing and dozens injured.

Four right groups accuse Alliance of overplaying workers’ safety

RMG workers

Four global right groups, in a report launched Monday, alleged that the Alliance for Bangladesh Worker Safety has overplayed progress with rosy status reports while workers’ lives remain at risk. The report also revealed that more than half of 175 identified factories which were all first inspected over one and a half years ago, still do not have appropriate fire exits, lack an approved fire alarm system or have major structural problems. International Labour Rights Forum, Worker Rights Consortium, Clean Clothes Campaign and Maquila Solidarity Network identified the 175 factories which supply apparels to one or more of these five Alliance member corporations — Walmart, Gap, Target, Hudson Bay and VF Corporation and for which the Accord publishes detailed progress reports. The rights groups assessed the degree of safety progress at these factories, focusing on three critical building safety issues: whether the factory has viable fire exits, whether it has installed a properly functioning fire alarm system, and whether any significant structural deficiencies (such as over-stressed structural columns) have been fixed for fire exits, fire alarms, and structural integrity based on Accord data. The analysis revealed considerable delays in repairing safety defects in factories supplying apparels to member-companies of the Alliance for Bangladesh Worker Safety. Even more concerning is the fact that the Alliance has overstated progress. Many of the factories listed as ‘on track’ on the Alliance website still face major safety hazards. This designation disregards the failure of factories to address major structural and fire hazards within the agreed timelines, thereby creating an exaggerated picture of progress.  “This means that hundred thousands of workers stitching clothes for Walmart, Gap, VF Corporation, Target and Hudson’s Bay Company, and their European subsidiaries Asda (Walmart), Galeria Kaufhof and Galeria Inno (both HBC), continue to work in hazardous conditions. These brands, despite knowing about these risks for a considerable time, have failed to make sure these factories are safe,” a Clean Clothes Campaign statement said. As such, unlike the Accord, the Alliance does not provide detailed information about the progress of repairs. Overstating the success of the Alliance and understating and under-reporting the still existing safety hazards, unjustifiably reassure companies, politicians and consumers that the situation in the Bangladeshi garment industry is nothing to worry about. The Alliance should correct its false claims of progress and start providing detailed and accurate information concerning the status of each safety renovation in its factories in order to be able to start working on a safer Bangladeshi garment industry, the rights groups said.   Although the Alliance is comprised of mainly North American brands, its failure to publicly report progress should also be of concern to European consumers, they added. The rights groups last year published report on H&M that revealed that the Swedish multinational retail-clothing company is ‘dramatically behind’ schedule in correcting the dangers identified by the Accord’s inspectors, thereby putting tens of thousands of workers’ lives at risk.

BGMEA to seek review of verdict for building demolition

bgmea bhaban

Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association will file a review petition with the court to reconsider the verdict on demolishing BGMEA Complex, said Siddiqur Rahman, president of the trade body. “We will file the review petition in the first week of next month. I hope the court will reconsider our plea as the contribution of the garment sector to national exports is more than 80 percent,” Rahman said. The Supreme Court, in a full verdict released on November 8, ordered BGMEA to immediately demolish the 15-storey building at its own cost, which was constructed illegally on the Begunbari canal and Hatirjheel lake in the heart of the capital.Otherwise, Rajdhani Unnayan Kartripakkha or Rajuk will do it within 90 days of receiving the order and realise the cost from BGMEA, it added.Amicus curiae advocate Manzill Murshid told The Daily Star that BGMEA can move a petition in 30 days, seeking a review of the verdict. A four-member Appellate Division bench headed by Chief Justice Surendra Kumar Sinha passed a short verdict on June 2, dismissing a BGMEA appeal and upholding an April 2011 High Court order. The HC verdict ordered the government to demolish the building within three months, saying it was built on land acquired through forgery and filled with earth illegally. Any commercial building changing the water bodies’ nature and character is unlawful and violates Environment Conservation Act 1995, it said. Also, the Export Promotion Bureau has no right to allot the property, it added. The construction violates ‘Section 3 of the Building Construction Act 195’ and other rules under it, reads the verdict. Moreover, the HC order was ‘well reasoned and based on proper appreciation of facts and circumstances as well as the law’, it said.

সংস্কারকাজ শেষ করেছে অ্যাকর্ডের ৩৬ কারখানা

accord

চলতি মাসে নতুন করে ছয়টি পোশাক কারখানা অগ্নি, বিদ্যুৎ ও ভবনের কাঠামোগত সব ধরনের ত্রুটি সংস্কারকাজ করে সনদ পেয়েছে। এর ফলে ইউরোপীয় ক্রেতাদের জোট অ্যাকর্ড অন ফায়ার অ্যান্ড বিল্ডিং সেফটি ইন বাংলাদেশের সদস্যভুক্ত ৩৬ কারখানা সব ধরনের ত্রুটি সংস্কার করে স্বীকৃতি পেয়েছে।

সংস্কারকাজ শেষ করা নতুন ছয়টি কারখানা হচ্ছে আশুলিয়ার অরনেট নিট গার্মেন্টস ইন্ডাস্ট্রিজ, সাভারের গ্লোবাল ফ্যাশন গার্মেন্টস ও গ্লোবাল আউটারওয়্যার, কেরানীগঞ্জের রিভার সাইড সোয়েটার, আশুলিয়ার টেক্সটাউন লিমিটেড ও শিন শিন অ্যাপারেলস। ২০১৪ সালের গোড়ার দিকে কারখানাগুলোতে প্রাথমিক পরিদর্শন করেছিলেন অ্যাকর্ডের প্রকৌশলীরা। তাঁরা কারখানার বিভিন্ন ধরনের ত্রুটি চিহ্নিত করে দেওয়ার পর কর্তৃপক্ষ সংশোধন পরিকল্পনা (ক্যাপ) অনুযায়ী কাজ করে। পরে প্রকৌশলীরা আবারও পরিদর্শন করেন। তখন নতুন করে ত্রুটি না পেলেই মিলে অ্যাকর্ডের চূড়ান্ত স্বীকৃতি।

অ্যাকর্ডের পাশাপাশি উত্তর আমেরিকার ক্রেতাদের জোট অ্যালায়েন্স ফর বাংলাদেশ ওয়ার্কার সেফটির অধীনে থাকা ৪৫ পোশাক কারখানা সংস্কারকাজ শেষ করেছে। চলতি মাসে তিনটি কারখানা এই স্বীকৃতি পেয়েছে। তবে কারখানাগুলো অ্যাকর্ডের সঙ্গে যৌথভাবে পরিদর্শন করেছে তারা।

Avery Dennison & Rochambeau launch smart digital jacket

avery dennison & rochambeau launch smart digital jacket

Avery Dennison Retail Branding and Information Solutions (RBIS) has joined hands with Rochambeau, a 2016 CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund finalist, to launch a smart digital jacket that allows wearers to receive personalised content. The ‘Bright Bmbr’ interactive jackets for fall use Avery Dennison’s Janela and Evrythng’s Internet of Things cloud-based platforms. The #BornDigital garments offer exclusive personalised dining, art, retail and fashion experiences to consumers. “The jacket allows wearers to receive personalised content, exclusive rewards and gain access to one-of-a-kind experiences. The left sleeve of the smart jacket features a hidden zipper pocket containing a limited-edition label containing NFC technology and a unique QR code, allowing consumers to connect with these smart tags and access rewards and curated experiences,” Avery Dennison said in a statement. “The designer label was initially started as an outlet for creative expression and artistic collaboration. We cannot think of a more amazing way to do this than to create beautiful garments with culture and connectivity stitched into the very fabric of the item. The digital birth means the limited-edition jackets is connected to the consumer and is triggered by a smartphone,” said Laurence Chandler, founder of Rochambeau. Avery Dennison has also collaborated with UK based jewellery designer Sarah Angold on four custom-made accessory pieces embedded with Avery Dennison RFID technology. Oak Labs’ interactive mirrors have been linked to Angold’s jewellery to elevate the consumer experience. “The physical and digital worlds are converging, and consumers expect to be connected seamlessly across all aspects of their lives. RFID technology provides endless opportunities for interactive experiences in the retail environment and our collaboration with Sarah Angold takes this to the next level by embedding the technology into the product itself,” said Francisco Melo, vice president and general manager of Global RFID at Avery Dennison.

Industry owners meet BEZA chief

BEZA

Chairman of the Bangladesh Economic Zones Authority Paban Chowdhury met with the leaders of the Chittagong Chamber of Commerce and Industry (CCCI) at the conference hall of Chittagong Circuit House on Sunday. During the meeting, he stressed the need for setting up a special industrial zone for revival of the tannery industry in Chittagong. “It’s really unfortunate that there is no leather village in the commercial hub of Chittagong. A long-term initiative is required to develop the leather industry and leather village in this part of the country,” he said. He sought advice and recommendations from the trade body leaders to build up a leather village for development of the tannery industry in Chittagong. CCCI president Mahbubul Alam said the government has taken steps for setting up 100 industrial zones throughout the country while more than 30 of them will be in Chittagong. But energy crisis is a major impediment to flourishing of the industries. Through development of infrastructures, the Chittagong region could turn into a really commercial hub, he added. He said 30 to 40 per cent of the country’s total rawhide is procured from the Chittagong region. So, this region can help a lot for the development of the leather industry if a leather village is set up here for the construction of tanneries. He also requested the BEZA chairman to set up a zone for aluminium industry in the port city. CCCI director Mahfuzul Haque Shah, ADC (LA) Md Daulatuzzaman Khan, owners of the tannery industries, shoe cottage industries and aluminium industries also spoke on the occasion while CCCI directors Ohid Siraj Chowdhury Swapan and Anjan Shekhor Das were present.

RMG BANGLADESH NEWS