Tech | February 18, 2011 | 28 comments

Workers paying high price at Bangladesh tanneries

JanforGore
This is unconscienable. The price of Globalization.
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28 comments // Workers paying high price at Bangladesh tanneries // Video

  • tommic
    • +1
      tommic  
    • Exploit places they can with the pollution from tanneries, caustic shit, very bad chemicals used and discarded. Its so bad the high school football and baseball fields I went to were declared superfund sites due to the chemicals discovered there from tanneries present over 100 years ago. They had to remove the top 16 feet of soil, replace it with stone and sand the topsoil as it was the playing fields. That removed soil had to be incinerated. Bad shit tanneries chemicals everywhere

    • 1 year ago
  • shanklinmike
    • -2
      shanklinmike  
    • If it wasn't for statism, they wouldn't be this poor in the first place.... Corporations are impossible without statism, as corporations are government chartered, created, and protected firms with liability protection.... a complete fraud.

      Until you end institutionalized violence and allow self-ownership and individual rights, the problems will just continue....

    • 1 year ago
  • BigAL72
    • +4
      BigAL72  
    • The poor and unfortunate outnumber the rulers 99 to 1. Look what is starting in Egypt, Yemen, Tunisia, Bahrain etc....

    • 1 year ago
  • eatmyphuck
  • dudefromtherock
  • JanforGore
    • +4
      JanforGore  
    • eatmyphuck:

      :::picking up megaphone::: LET MY VOICE BE HEARD ABOUT IT. Boycott the goods made from this form of slavery. Also let the buyers of these goods like Macy's and other stores know that I will not buy one item in any of their stores ever. What about you?

    • 1 year ago
  • resolute
    • +5
      resolute  
    • Should we ask our government to certify imports so that they have not been manufactured under standards less than what we require here?

    • 1 year ago
  • JanforGore
  • bailey78
    • +4
      bailey78  
    • We don't make anything here anymore so it all falls on who ever will let their lands be poisoned by the rich that are running things Both in office and in the boardrooms.

    • 1 year ago
  • nanac
    • +4
      nanac  
    • It is a disgrace to mankind, when poor people of the world are forced to suffer, so rich corporations can profit..

    • 1 year ago
  • dudefromtherock
  • JanforGore
    • +4
      JanforGore  
    • nanac:

      Unfortunately, not many see the statement this makes regarding our collective morality to just say its part of the world and there is nothing we can do about it.

    • 1 year ago
  • nanac
    • +2
      nanac  
    • dudefromtherock:

      This is why we must purchase our goods from the corporations that are people friendly, or support small businesses that offer the same products..In most cases, small businesses produce superior products to those sold at Walmart...Walmart is bad for the world..They have destroyed the mom, and pop businesses of America!

    • 1 year ago
  • nanac
    • +2
      nanac  
    • JanforGore:

      This is sad but true.The only way to fight complacency, and ignorance of this growing problem, is to continue bringing attention to this horrible practice..

    • 1 year ago
  • JanforGore
    • +5
      JanforGore  
    • This is what Republicans in Congress want this country to look like!

      These people don't deserve this. They are also killing the rivers. Poor people in our world are not expendable. This incenses me!

    • 1 year ago
  • JanforGore
    • +7
      JanforGore  
    • Image
    • http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20110218/wl_sthasia_afp/bangladesheconomyenvironment...

      This is the true price for our leather shoes. This is why western companies go to these countries because people are so poor that they don't even notice the stench of the pollution and poisons they are inhaling through their lungs and skin because they need that 100 dollars a month.

      Consumption kills.
      __________________________

      Excerpt:

      "Standing barefoot in toxic chromium effluent at a tannery in Dhaka's Hazaribag district, 23-year-old leather worker Sumon fears his job is sending him to an early grave.

      A decade of inhaling fumes from the chemicals used to turn Bangladeshi raw hide into soft leather for shoes to be sold in the West has given Sumon, who started working in the tannery at 13, a shallow cough and stabbing chest pains.

      "I don't like the work but I have no choice, I need the money," Sumon, who uses only one name, told AFP as he pulled freshly tanned skins out of huge barrels of blue-grey chromium liquid, which is used to process raw hide.

      Cow and goat skins, caked in salt or still bloody from the slaughterhouse, are stacked in piles inside the tannery, but Sumon said the stench from the raw hides is the least of his problems.

      "When I first started, the chemical fumes made me so sick I couldn't eat for two months, now I can't even smell them," he said.

      "We get no training, no safety equipment -- workers have to learn to be careful of the chemicals. I had a few accidents at first," he added, pointing to large, burn-like scars on his forearms and shins.

      In Hazaribag district, home to hundreds of tanneries like the Salma Leather Cooperation where Sumon works, the environmental and public health costs of the rapid growth of global demand for cheap shoes are on full display.

      The area, once a pleasant, semi-rural district in the Bangladeshi capital, is now a wasteland of toxic swamps, garbage landfills and mountains of decomposing leather scraps, surrounded by slums where tannery workers live.

      Piles of smouldering trash line the banks of the nearby Buriganga, which is classified as a "dead" river after it hits Hazaribag as pollution from the tanneries has made it impossible for any fish or plantlife to survive.

      Every day, the tanneries collectively dump 22,000 cubic litres of toxic waste, including cancer-causing chromium, into the Buriganga -- Dhaka's main river and a key water supply -- according to the ministry of environment.

      More than 90 percent of tannery workers suffer from some kind of disease -- from asthma to cancer -- due to chemical exposure, according to a 2008 survey by SEHD, a local charity, with local residents being almost as badly affected.

      Despite their shocking environmental and work safety records, business is booming in Hazaribag, as growing global demand for footwear coupled with rising manufacturing costs in China prompts western buyers to turn to Bangladesh.

      Leather is the country's fastest growing export, and Hazaribag's tanneries produced the bulk of the 32 billion taka (460 million dollars) worth of leather shipped in 2009, mostly to Europe, Russia, Japan and China.

      Leather exports were also up 45 percent year on year from July to November 2010, with shoe shipments to American markets alone up 50 percent in the same period, according to export bureau figures.

      Eager for the leather industry -- and its export earnings -- to grow, the Bangladeshi government has long turned a blind eye to the rampant pollution and terrible working conditions inside the tanneries, activists say.

      "The only reason the Hazaribag tanneries are allowed to operate is the export earnings," said Rezwana Hossain, an environmental rights lawyer.

      "These tanneries are operating right in the middle of the city, in the middle of residential areas and they are continuing to pollute the major river of the city, year after year," she said.

      "If you look at the environmental damage, the killing of the Buriganga river, the pollution of the city's water supply, the public health costs -- then these export earnings don't look so impressive."

      The industry's export earnings could increase significantly in the next few years if Dhaka can capitalise on the "China effect", said Sayed Nasim Manzur, managing director of ApexAdelchi, a joint venture shoe manufacturer.

      Brands like Jones Bootmaker and Macy's already source shoes in Bangladesh, and many others are likely to follow suit, he said."

    • 1 year ago
  • bailey78
  • coolplanet
  • bailey78
  • dudefromtherock
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
    • +2
      JanforGore  
    • coolplanet:

      Absolutely. Many don't "need" half the s*** they buy. It sickens me that people even knowing where and how these goods get to them ( which have probably been spammed right on this site previously) will just forget about it because it means they will have to have a conscience the next time they go to buy those nice leather boots or that leather purse or shoes they want even though they already have a closet full of it. Sorry, but it angers me to see people being treated like this simply to satisfy some selfish wants of people who don't give a damn about how it gets to the store. What has happened to the collective consciousness of humanity? Have we ever had one? Leather boots crack and you throw them away. The black rivers made to get them to American stores will never come back.

    • 1 year ago
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
  • bailey78
  • bailey78
  • coolplanet
    • +2
      coolplanet  
    • JanforGore:

      Meanwhile i'm afraid most Americans think that food comes from grocery stores.
      Don't apologize for your anger at clueless consumers. We adore your righteous indignation!
      I only wish i had half your dedication in getting the sordid truth out to the world.

    • 1 year ago
  • JanforGore
    • +2
      JanforGore  
    • coolplanet:

      Well thank you so much. I think I missed my calling. I should have gone to law school and been an advocate for indigenous people globally. They are so abused in this world and they don't deserve it. These are the people of our planet who know its secrets. They know how to cure diseases and grow food in tune with the soil, the sun, the water and the seasons and understand all of the subtle and intricate workings of Mother Earth. They are her true protectors and that also means they are our protectors because what they do to fight off these unncessary assaults on natural resources and these abuses is done because they see how precious this planet is and that abusing her abuses all of us. I can't see this injustice and not feel incensed as if I want to burst. I also feel so helpless and that is the greatest frustration of all. There is a way to change this (awareness being a big first step) to make it better for the people who are forced into these horrible lives for our comfort at the expense of rivers (arteries of life that are turning black and killing all that is in them) but it does take all of us to just saying no to the products made and the conditions they make these people work in. And with the collective will to do it we could do it. I think the fact that will isn't really there is truly the biggest disappointment to me... but it is also unacceptable.

    • 1 year ago
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