Showing posts with label Conditions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Conditions. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Doctors “afraid to diagnose health conditions linked to the oil and gas industry”



tar sands - evacuationLater today hearings are scheduled to begin on emissions and vapours emanating for the tar sands, specifically around the Peace River area.


The hearings, which have been scheduled by the Albertan Energy Regulator, have come after years of complaints by local residents into the odours, which are so bad some families have been forced to move from their homes.


Local residents have been complaining of symptoms such as severe headaches, dizziness, sinus problems, vomiting, muscle spasms and fatigue, amongst others.


But we do not know how badly the tar sands are really impacting people’s health. This is because according to a report commissioned specifically for the hearings by a public health specialist, some local doctors are reluctant to treat patients who draw connections between the tar sands industry and their personal health problems.


The report, prepared by Dr Margaret Sears, concludes that: “There were reports from various sources that physicians would not diagnose a relationship between bitumen exposures and chronic symptoms.”


“Physicians are quite frankly afraid to diagnose health conditions linked to the oil and gas industry,” she adds.


And it gets worse. For those individuals who suggested there was a “connection” between their health problems and the tar sands, Sears records how “Physician care was refused … and that analytical services were refused by an Alberta laboratory when told that the proposed analysis was to investigate exposure to emissions related to bitumen extraction.”


Locals are arguing that the regulator must force the industry to capture the emissions: “The best result possible is that they make some regulations to get companies to capture their vapours,” believes Alain Labrecque, who has had to vacate his farm after suffering numerous symptoms including headaches, dizziness, fatigue and memory loss.


His family only started experiencing symptoms in 2011, after Baytex Energy purchased nearly 50 wells and in the area and started heating bitumen in above-ground tanks to extract the oil.


“There is definitely a regulatory gap,” Labrecque argues “We just want more accountability. We want the regulator to take on a greater role, and have regulations in place so they can enforce them, and just provide more accountability to industry.”


Baytex, for its part, predictably argues that “there are no human health impacts associated with the emissions from our projects.”


The Labrecques have also now filed an injunction against Baytex to force the company to stop operating. The hearing though won’t be heard until March.


Local residents will also have to wait until March for the report into the hearings to be published by the regulator.


http://priceofoil.org/2014/01/21/doctors-afraid-diagnose-health-conditions-linked-oil-gas-industry/





2012 The Awakening



Doctors “afraid to diagnose health conditions linked to the oil and gas industry”

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Quant macro fund QFS shuts down, cites tough conditions

Quant macro fund QFS shuts down, cites tough conditions
http://pixel.quantserve.com/pixel/p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif




BOSTON Tue Jan 14, 2014 2:50pm EST



BOSTON Jan 14 (Reuters) – QFS Asset Management, which used a quantitative approach to global macro investing, said that it is shutting down after 26 years in the business, citing difficult market conditions.


The Greenwich, Connecticut-based firm, founded by economist Sandy Grossman, said in news release on Tuesday that it will return nearly $ 1 billion to clients by the end of the month.


“The current market environment does not offer adequate risk adjusted opportunities for fundamentally-driven quant macro strategies, and that is unlikely to change for the foreseeable future,” QFS Chief Executive Officer Karlheinz Muhr said in a statement. Muhr joined the firm as part of a merger in 2011.


QFS becomes one of the new year’s first hedge fund industry casualties after a difficult 2013 marked by generally lackluster returns. The Hedge Fund Research Inc’s Macro index dipped 0.3 percent last year, making for a third consecutive year of declines. Macro funds bet on interest rate movements, currencies, and broad economic trends.


At its heyday just before the financial crisis, QFS oversaw $ 3.6 billion in assets. Assets have shrunk despite some strong returns, people familiar with the fund said.


QFS isn’t alone in complaining about uncertain economic conditions and what managers perceive as a more difficult investing environment.


A number of large hedge funds, including Seth Klarman’s Baupost Group and Daniel Loeb’s Third Point, have given back some money to clients last year to guard against becoming too large and running out of investment ideas. (Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss; Editing by Nick Zieminski)






Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate




Read more about Quant macro fund QFS shuts down, cites tough conditions and other interesting subjects concerning Real Estate at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Saturday, October 5, 2013

The World Cup Socker in Qatar (2022), Controversy over Appalling Migrant Worker Conditions


L’homme de l’année 2011 : L’Emir du Qatar, Hamad Ben Khalifa al Thani, le nouvel Air and Field Marshall du Monde arabe


Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani is Qatar’s Emir [image left]. He heads a despotic monarchical rogue state.


He maintains supreme power. What he says goes. Ordinary Qataris have no say.


State terror defines official policy. Qatar has one of the world’s worst human and civil rights record.


Torture and other forms of repression are commonplace. So is brutal worker exploitation. Foreign nationals suffer most.


 According to the State Department’s 2012 human rights report:


“The principal human rights problems were the inability of citizens to change their government peacefully, restriction of fundamental civil liberties, and pervasive denial of expatriate workers’ rights.”


“The monarch-appointed government prohibited organized political parties and restricted civil liberties, including freedoms of speech, press, and assembly and access to a fair trial for persons held under the Protection of Society Law and Combating Terrorism Law.”


“Other continuing human rights concerns included restrictions on the freedoms of religion and movement, as foreign laborers could not freely travel abroad.”


“Trafficking in persons, primarily in the labor and domestic worker sectors, was a problem.”


“Legal, institutional, and cultural discrimination against women limited their participation in society.”


“The noncitizen “Bidoon” (stateless persons) who resided in the country with an unresolved legal status experienced social discrimination.”



Migrants comprise the vast majority of Qatar’s two million population. London’s Guardian ran a series of articles explaining more.


The International Federation of Association Football (FIFA) chose Qatar to host the 2022 World Cup games.


FIFA president Sepp Blatter did so disgracefully. He ignored outrageous exploitation foreign construction workers face. More on that below.


Qatar is a key US regional ally. Doha hosts America’s forward CENTCOM (US Central Command) headquarters. It’s based at Al Udeid Air Base. It’s home for 5,000 US forces.


It’s a hub for US Afghanistan and Iraq operations. Qatar was instrumental in Obama’s Libya war. Its special forces armed and trained extremist Islamist militants.


 They included the CIA affiliated Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG). They’re ideologically allied with Al Qaeda.


In December 2004, the State Department designated it a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO). If doesn’t matter. America uses Al Qaeda and likeminded organizations as enemies and allies.


Qatar supports Obama’s war on Syria. It helps recruit extremist fighters. It provides funding, weapons and training. It’s part of Washington’s plan to oust Assad.


London’s Guardian headlined “Qatar: one migrant worker’s story.”


 Nepalese worker Bhupendra Malla Thakuri “borrowed money to afford a recruitment agent’s fees (for) a job as a truck driver in Qatar…”


 It pays 1,200 riyals monthly (about $ 330). In June 2011, Bhupendra was severely injured. His leg was crushed on the job. He was hospitalized for months.


“When I was discharged,” he said, “the company only paid me for the 20-odd days I had worked that month, but nothing more.”


 ”They didn’t give me my salary. They didn’t give me anything. It was a very critical situation. I was injured and my leg had become septic.”


 His company gave him a document in English to sign. It asked him to agree to return to Nepal. It declared all his benefits paid.


He refused to sign, saying:


 ”I had to return to the hospital frequently for checkups, but I didn’t have money for that. I needed money for transportation and medicine. There was no money for food.”



 His indebtedness rose to about $ 4,400. He had no way repay. He sued. He was lucky. He got significant compensation. On July 29, he went home.


 According to Amnesty International Gulf migrant researcher James Lynch:


“Bhupendra’s case illustrates both the callousness with which so many companies treat migrant workers in Qatar, but also the laborious and confusing processes which migrant workers are expected to navigate in order to get their rights.”


“It took him more than two years, and enormous stamina and courage, to get the compensation he deserved, during which time he was penniless.”



On September 25, the Guardian headlined “Revealed: Qatar’s World Cup ‘slaves.’ Exclusive: Abuse and exploitation of migrant workers preparing emirate for 2022.”


They endure outrageous human rights abuses. In recent weeks, dozens of Nepalese migrant workers died.


“(T)housands more (endure) appalling labour abuses, a Guardian investigation has found, raising serious questions about Qatar’s preparations to host the 2022 World Cup.”



During summer 2013, “Nepalese workers died at a rate of almost one a day.”


 Many were young men. Sudden heart attacks killed them. Others died from accidents. Human life in Qatar is cheap.


 Guardian investigators “found evidence to suggest that thousands of Nepalese, who make up the single largest group of labourers in Qatar, face exploitation and abuses that amount to modern-day slavery.”


From June 4 – August 8, at least 44 workers died. Heart attacks or workplace accidents took most of them.


Other damning evidence uncovered included:


  • forced labor on World Cup infrastructure;

  • withholding pay for some Nepalese workers for months; allegedly it’s to prevent them from running away;

  • confiscating worker passports; doing so reduces their status to illegal aliens; and

  • denying workers access to free drinking water in summer heat.

“About 30 Nepalese sought refuge at their embassy in Doha to escape the brutal conditions of their employment,” said the Guardian.


Rogue Qatari officials are very much involved in ruthless migrant worker exploitation.


“The overall picture is of one of the richest nations exploiting one of the poorest to get ready for the world’s most popular sporting tournament,” the Guardian added.


It shows FIFA’s complicity with brutal police state repression. It doesn’t surprise. Formula One’s governing body includes Bahrain on its calendar.


It does so despite the Gulf monarchy’s appalling human rights record.


Murder, torture, other forms of abuse, lawless arrests, kangaroo court trials, and longterm imprisonments don’t matter.


Bahrain Grand Prix races are held as scheduled. Formula One’s Bernie Ecclestone operates like FIFA’s Sepp Blatter. Money, lots of it, prestige, and self-interest alone matter.


State terror is a small price to pay. Welcome to Qatar and Bahrain. They’re two of the world’s most repressive dictatorships. They’re valued US allies. They’re complicit in America’s imperial wars.


One migrant Qatari worker told Guardian investigators:


“We’d like to leave, but the company won’t let us. I’m angry about how this company is treating us, but we’re helpless.”


“I regret coming here, but what to do? We were compelled to come just to make a living, but we’ve had no luck.”



Guardian investigators found migrant workers sleeping 12 to a room. Filthy conditions made many sick.


Some were forced to work without pay. They were left begging for food and clean water. Ran Kuman Mahara said:


“We were working on an empty stomach for 24 hours; 12 hours’ work and then no food all night.”


“When I complained, my manager assaulted me, kicked me out of the labour camp I lived in and refused to pay me anything. I had to beg for food from other workers.”



Nearly all Nepalese migrant workers have huge debts. They accrued them to pay recruitment agents for their jobs.


They’re obligated to repay. They have no way to do so. They had no idea how brutally they’d be exploited.


They held against their will in forced bondage. They’re treated callously. Dozens are worked to death.


Nepalese ambassador to Qatar, Maya Kumari Sharma, called the emirate an “open jail” for foreign workers. It’s that and much more.


According to Anti-Slavery International director Aidan McQuade:


 ”The evidence uncovered by the Guardian is clear proof of the use of systematic forced labour in Qatar.”


 ”In fact, these working conditions and the astonishing number of deaths of vulnerable workers go beyond forced labour to the slavery of old where human beings were treated as objects.”


“There is no longer a risk that the World Cup might be built on forced labour. It is already happening.”


Qatar has the world’s highest ratio of migrant workers to domestic population. Over 90% of its workforce are aliens. From now until 2022, another 1.5 million will be recruited.


Based on current conditions, they’ll be held in forced bondage. They’ll be brutalized against their will.


They’ll be lawlessly held to build stadiums, roads, ports, and hotels, as well as other infrastructure and facilities in time for FIFA’s 2022 World Cup games.


Nepal supplies about 40% of Qatar’s migrant workers. In 2012, over 100,000 were recruited. They had no idea how brutally they’d be treated.


 On the one hand, FIFA officials insist on acceptable labor standards conditions and practices. On the other, they turn a blind eye to appalling abuses.


It bears repeating. Money, lots of it, prestige, and self-interest alone matter. It doesn’t surprise. Olympism operates the same way.


 It’s more about profiteering, exploitation, and cynicism than sport. In modern times, it’s always been that way.


 It’s dark side excludes good will and fair play. Scandalous wheeling, dealing, collusion, and bribery turns sport into a commercial grab bag free-for-all.


Marginalized populations are exploited. Thousands are evicted and displaced. Disadvantaged residents are left high and dry.


Cozy relationships among government officials, corporate sponsors, universities, and IOC bosses facilitate exploiting communities, people, and athletes unfairly. It’s standard practice.


FIFA operates the same way. Denial of fundamental rights and freedoms is ignored. Readying venues for scheduled events come first.


Repression and worker abuses don’t matter. High-minded hyperbole conceals what demands condemnation.


CH2M Hill is a leading consulting, engineering, construction, program management firm. It “was recently appointed the official programme management consultant to the supreme committee,” said the Guardian.


It claims a “zero tolerance policy for the use of forced labour and other human trafficking practices.”


According to its engineering subsidiary Halcrow:


“Our supervision role of specific construction packages ensures adherence to site contract regulation for health, safety and environment.”


 ”The terms of employment of a contractor’s labour force is not under our direct purview.”



Nepalese worker explain otherwise. They’re virtual slaves. They want to leave but can’t. According to one unnamed migrant:


“We’d like to leave, but the company won’t let us. If we run away, we become illegal and that makes it hard to find another job.”



Qatar’s labor ministry lied claiming it enforces strict standards and practices. According to the Guardian:


“The workers’ plight makes a mockery of concerns for the 2022 footballers.”



General Federation of Nepalese Trade Unions head Umesh Upadhyaya said:


“Everyone is talking about the effect of Qatar’s extreme heat on a few hundred footballers.”


“But they are ignoring the hardships, blood and sweat of thousands of migrant workers, who will be building the World Cup stadiums in shifts that can last eight times the length of a football match.”



They turn a blind eye to the appalling human rights abuses they endure. They’re held in forced bondage for Qatari/FIFA profits, self-interest and prestige.


Doing so makes a mockery of sport. Illusion substitutes for reality. Dark side truth explains best.


Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago. He can be reached at [email protected]


His new book is titled “Banker Occupation: Waging Financial War on Humanity.”


http://www.claritypress.com/LendmanII.html


Visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com.


Listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network.


It airs Fridays at 10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are archived for easy listening.


http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour


http://www.dailycensored.com/appalling-migrant-worker-conditions-qatar/




Global Research



The World Cup Socker in Qatar (2022), Controversy over Appalling Migrant Worker Conditions

Monday, August 19, 2013

VIDEO: Volvo Trucks - Brian and Steve discuss the extreme driving conditions in Australia







The Volvo FH16, Volvo’s new truck for heavy long-haul operations, has been tested in the toughest of all environments: Australia. Over a period of two days, it was put through its paces by journalists Brian Weatherley and Steve Brooks, both of whom have many years of experience in the transport industry.













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VIDEO: Volvo Trucks - Brian and Steve discuss the extreme driving conditions in Australia

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Striking Workers, Bangladeshi Activist Challenge Wal-Mart on Labor Conditions at Stores & Factories



Transcript



This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.



AARON MATÉ: The annual shareholders’ meeting of the retail giant Wal-Mart was held last week in the company’s home state of Arkansas. Thousands of Wal-Mart workers were flown in for a week-long celebration of the world’s largest retailer. In some ways, it resembled a major Hollywood event. The singers Jennifer Hudson, Elton John, Kelly Clarkson and John Legend all made appearances. The actor Hugh Jackman served as master of ceremonies for Friday’s meeting inside a sports arena named after Wal-Mart co-founder Bud Walton. To the cheers of thousands of spectators, the actor Tom Cruise took the stage praise on Wal-Mart’s global reach.


TOM CRUISE: Very pleased to be here. I truly admire your company, you know, and the more I learn about everything that you do, I’m inspired by what you all create every day, you know, because your company—I’m sure you all know this, but it is a role model for how business can address some of the biggest issues facing our world, you know, in ways big and small. And all around the globe, Wal-Mart is taking the lead and making a difference. And that’s something I really admire. You know, that this company does is it’s using its size and scale to improve women’s lives across the world.



AMY GOODMAN: But amidst the celebration of Wal-Mart, there also came protest. The group OUR Walmart brought its demand for the company to commit to giving workers full-time employment and a minimum salary of $ 25,000 a year. Around a hundred striking workers staged a series of actions after arriving in a caravan from across the country. They have walked off the job in Florida, Massachusetts, California, to protest what they allege to be worker retaliation against those seeking to change company practices on wages, worker safety and unions. Although small in size, it’s Wal-Mart’s longest strike to date. Inside the shareholders’ meeting, the workers and activists took advantage of a brief window to present non-binding resolutions before thousands of their colleagues as well as the company’s top executives. The measures were all defeated, because the founding Walton family still owns more than half the company’s stock. Janet Sparks, a Louisiana Wal-Mart employee, drew applause when she compared the wages of struggling U.S. workers to CEO Mike Duke’s $ 20.7 million paycheck.


JANET SPARKS: We all know that times are tough for many of our customers. But I want you to know that times are tough for many Wal-Mart associates, too. We are stretching our paychecks to pay our bills and support our families. … So when I think about the fact that our CEO, Mike Duke, made over $ 20 million last year—more than 1,000 times the average Wal-Mart associate—with all due respect, I have to say, I don’t think that’s right.



AMY GOODMAN: Also speaking out there was Kalpona Akter, a workers’ rights activist from Bangladesh. She urged Wal-Mart to stop rejecting new safety standards after the Dhaka building collapse that killed over 1,100 workers in April. Kalpona Akter made a direct appeal to Wal-Mart Chair Rob Walton.


KALPONA AKTER: Mr. Rob Walton, I’m sure you know that these fixing buildings would cost just a tiny fraction of your family wealth. So I implore to you, please, help us. You have the power to do this very easily. Don’t you agree that the factories where Wal-Mart products are made should be safe for the workers? For years, every time there is an accident, Wal-Mart officials have made promise to improve the terrible conditions in my country’s garment factories, but the tragedies continue. With all due respect, the time for empty promises is over.



AMY GOODMAN: Wal-Mart is one of only a few major retailers that have refused to sign on to the new safety standards after the Dhaka tragedy.


For more, we’re joined now by Kalpona Akter herself, just back from attending the Wal-Mart meeting, executive director of the Bangladesh Center for Worker Solidarity. She started work in garment factories when she was 12. She’s currently in the United States to call on retailers like Wal-Mart, The Gap and Disney to take the lead on improving working conditions in Bangladesh. And we’re joined by Scott Nova, executive director of the Worker Rights Consortium, which investigates working conditions in the factories around the world.


We contacted Wal-Mart to join us, but they said they were unavailable. The Gap did not respond to our request for an interview.


Kalpona Akter, what about the response to what you had to say in the Wal-Mart shareholders’ meeting?


KALPONA AKTER: The response was, I would say, it was zero, which was expected, because this Walton will not get back to you when it has come the time to pay the workers or improve the working conditions. So, they didn’t respond at all. But our point was, the people need to be heard. These Waltons and the Wal-Mart other shareholders, they should know from us, from the firsthand information, that—what’s really going on there. They shouldn’t just close their eyes and say, or just wash their hand and say that, “Well, we didn’t know that,” or, “It wasn’t our fault. It was our sourcer who was killing these workers” in—back home.


AARON MATÉ: Well, Wal-Mart said no one from the company was able to join us today, but it sent us a statement that said, quote, “Some media reports have given the impression there was production for Walmart happening in Rana Plaza at the time of the tragic building collapse. That’s wrong. Our investigation … after the collapse revealed no evidence of authorized or unauthorized production at the time of the tragedy.” Meanwhile, in May, Wal-Mart announced it would terminate its contract with Canadian jeans maker Fame Jeans after documents surfaced the company ordered pants from inside Rana Plaza. So, are these satisfactory steps to you?


KALPONA AKTER: It is not. I mean, first, they are sourcing from the outsourcer. And when it has come to say that, “Yes, our products were there,” now they are just saying that, “Oh, we are cutting the contact with our sourcing companies.” I mean, definitely, this is not a satisfactory answer for us. That Wal-Mart should take responsibility. They were producing their clothes in Rana Plaza, but not in the time when the factory collapsed, but they had connection. They could even improve this factory condition. They could prevent these deaths, and Rana collapse would be even prevented.


AMY GOODMAN: There was the fire.


KALPONA AKTER: Mm-hmm.


AMY GOODMAN: And then there was the building collapse, two different buildings, two different workplaces.


KALPONA AKTER: Yes.


AMY GOODMAN: Did Wal-Mart refer to any officially from the stage at the shareholders’ meeting?


KALPONA AKTER: It was—you know, I was surprised that they haven’t said any word about this fire and about this building collapse.


AMY GOODMAN: How many people died in the fire?


KALPONA AKTER: In the fire, in Tazreen Fashion fire, it has killed 112 workers and left hundreds injured. And in Rana Plaza, it killed 1,127 and left more than 600 or 700 injured for lifetime. And in that shareholder meeting, they haven’t even given any condolence for those families. They haven’t felt sad. No word for those.


AARON MATÉ: Scott Nova, the wider picture here—can you talk about how companies like Wal-Mart and others use subcontractors to employ people in places like Dhaka?


SCOTT NOVA: Sure. Well, it’s crucial to understand, Wal-Mart and the other big Western retailers didn’t stumble into a worker safety crisis in Bangladesh. They helped to cause that crisis by placing tremendous pressure on their contract suppliers in Bangladesh to produce forever lower prices, giving them overwhelming incentive to reduce production costs by ignoring safety standards. This is the fundamental reason why workers are dying in Bangladesh in factories producing for companies like Wal-Mart.


AMY GOODMAN: What are the safety standards that are being proposed, that The Gap and Wal-Mart have not signed onto, but other corporations like H&M have?


SCOTT NOVA: Well, for the first time in the contemporary history of the global apparel industry, major brands and retailers have signed a binding, enforceable agreement under which they must pay to carry out building renovations, repairs and retrofitting necessary to turn these death-trap factories into safe structures. H&M, the biggest producer in Bangladesh, has signed. Carrefour, the second-largest global retailer after Wal-Mart, has signed. Inditex, the biggest fashion retailer, has signed. But Wal-Mart and Gap refuse to make these binding commitments to clean up their factories in Bangladesh and make them safe.


AMY GOODMAN: What are the commitments, and who wrote this contract?


SCOTT NOVA: The agreement was developed by non-governmental organizations and both global and Bangladeshi labor unions. Under the agreement, the brands and retailers must open their factories up to independent inspections by competent safety experts with full public reports of all inspections. And then they must compel the factories to carry out any and all building repairs and renovations necessary to address safety hazards and make the building safe—installing fire exits, which most of these buildings don’t have, to offer a critical example. They must then leave, cease doing business with any factory that refuses to undertake these repairs and renovations—except the critical point, the brands and retailers have to pay for the repairs and renovations; they can’t place the burden purely on the factory. And if the factories will take the money and undertake the renovations and operate safely, then the brands and retailers have to stay and continue to produce at those factories and support the factory and support the workers.


AARON MATÉ: What would it mean if Wal-Mart signed on?


SCOTT NOVA: Wal-Mart is the second-biggest producer in Bangladesh after H&M. Wal-Mart’s refusal to participate means that there are hundreds of factories and tens of thousands of workers that are outside the protective scope of this accord, which means that the safety hazards in those factories won’t be addressed, the safety of those workers won’t be protected.


AMY GOODMAN: These are some of the voices of workers, shortly after the Rana Plaza disaster, who said the factory owners forced them to go to work even after they found massive cracks in the building’s walls.


RIA BEGUM: [translated] We didn’t want to go up in the factory this morning, but the management forced us to go up and said there was no problem with the building. Just after that, I sat on my table to work, and the building just collapsed. I couldn’t even leave. I was trapped at my table.



JWEEL ISLAM: [translated] I started my work at 8:00 this morning. At about 9:30, I suddenly heard a strange sound, and I saw the building was collapsing. I then ran through a stairwell and jumped down. I lost consciousness, but I was rescued by others.



HALIMA KHATOON: [translated] Inside at about 9:10 a.m., the building collapsed, and we were trapped inside since then and up to now. It is 10:18 p.m. Eleven hours, we were trapped. We did not want to enter the building, but the owners pushed us to get in and work.



AMY GOODMAN: Some of the voices of those workers who escaped the Rana Plaza collapse. I wanted to go to what Wal-Mart and The Gap, these two—and I’m sorry that they wouldn’t join us, but—are saying about not signing onto this contract that other multinational corporations are signing onto.


SCOTT NOVA: Right. Well, one of Wal-Mart’s most astonishing excuses, their claim is that the inspections they themselves do, with no transparency or accountability, will be a faster mechanism for protecting worker safety in Bangladesh—this from a company that has been producing in Bangladesh for nearly a quarter of a century and during that time has done nothing to protect the safety of workers. Gap’s main argument is some abstruse claim about supposed legal liability that they face. It’s a trumped-up claim. Gap’s real concern is that they don’t want to pay the costs of repairing these buildings and making them safe. But even if there is legal liability, the question for Gap is: Are they saying that workers in Bangladesh should continue to die so Gap can be protected from litigation? That appears to be their position.


AMY GOODMAN: And since we just played these voices from the Rana Plaza, Kalpona, again, the documents that surfaced, what, three weeks after, because Wal-Mart was called. They said, “We are not making clothing in this factory now.”


KALPONA AKTER: Yeah, I mean, we found that documents in the rubble. And my colleagues and me, we went there, and we found that. And it clearly says that Fame Jeans was—Fame Jeans, one of the outsourcing of the company—sorry, Wal-Mart—was sourcing clothes from Ether Tex, a factory, was located in Rana Plaza. And there were—when I saw the email in relevant to Fame Jeans and Wal-Mart, I called a person. There was a merchandiser. I called personally to that person to be confirmed that Wal-Mart was there. And he confirmed, “Yes, the Wal-Mart was sourcing from our company last year.”


AMY GOODMAN: We’re going to continue this conversation and talk also about Wal-Mart workers in the United States. Kalpona Akter, Bangladesh Center for Worker Solidarity is her organization. Scott Nova, Worker Rights Consortium. And when I come back, Josh Eidelson will also be joining us, talking about Wal-Mart workers in the United States. Stay with us.


[break]


AMY GOODMAN: To talk more about Wal-Mart, we’re joined by Josh Eidelson, journalist that’s covering labor issues for The Nation, has reported from the Wal-Mart shareholders’ meeting last week, also a contributing writer for Salon.com and In These Times. We are still with Kalpona Akter, executive director of the Bangladesh Center for Worker Solidarity, and Scott Nova, executive director of the Worker Rights Consortium.


Josh Eidelson, can you make a link between what Scott and Kalpona are talking about with worker conditions abroad and what’s happening here, this growing movement around Wal-Mart?


JOSH EIDELSON: So, in each case, we see a challenge to Wal-Mart’s business model, a business model that we see the most extreme consequences of in places like Bangladesh. When you talk to some of the workers in the United States, though, what they will tell you is the difference is just a question of what Wal-Mart can get away with. So we see this push down on costs and this active effort to suppress worker organizing, that has consequences that are dramatic and then has daily consequences in terms of the poverty of Wal-Mart workers in the United States. In each case, though, we now see a challenge. And so, we see a strike wave that’s moved through Wal-Mart’s supply chain. We see Wal-Mart retail workers, workers in Wal-Mart contracted warehouses and Wal-Mart workers abroad making common cause in taking on the company.


And we saw that in Arkansas when the strikers came to crash Wal-Mart’s party in Arkansas. One of the most dramatic actions I witnessed there was workers, along with Kalpona Akter, along with international Wal-Mart workers, lining up across from Wal-Mart’s home office headquarters to sing a dirge about the deaths in Bangladesh, to read Bible verses. And as they did this, some of those thousands of Wal-Mart employees that were flown in by Wal-Mart started watching, listening, taking pictures. At that point, Wal-Mart management started leading those workers in the Wal-Mart cheer: “Give me a W! Give me an A! What does that spell? Wal-Mart!” They were having workers do this cheer, as about 50 feet away you had workers chanting, “Which side are you on, Wal-Mart? Are you on the side of safety, or are you on the side of murder?”


AARON MATÉ: Josh, what are some of the key complaints that OUR Walmart has against Wal-Mart? And what do you say to the company or supporters of the company, I imagine, saying, “Well, look, it’s only a hundred workers. It’s a small strike”?


JOSH EIDELSON: So, this absolutely is a small strike. The workers’ main demands have been around wages, which one estimate pegged at $ 8.81 an hour currently; around healthcare; around staffing, which they say creates problems both for customers and for workers; and around retaliation against workers who organize. Wal-Mart is right to say that this is so far a very small minority of workers who are active. What Wal-Mart is not saying is that Wal-Mart is doing everything in its power to prevent this from getting bigger. We see what, in labor organizing, we call “carrots and sticks.” So, on the one hand, Wal-Mart has begun to make moves at least to appear to address some of these grievances; on the other hand, you have these mandatory captive audience meetings, where the company lectures workers in mandatory meetings about not getting involved. And you have over 150 allegations of illegal retaliation and intimidation against workers to prevent them from stepping up. And so, when Wal-Mart says it’s not concerned, it’s fair to say that they’re bluffing.


AMY GOODMAN: And explain what OUR Walmart is.


JOSH EIDELSON: So, OUR Walmart is an organization significantly backed by the United Food and Commercial Workers Union. It’s a part of the array of alt-labor groups that are organizing workers outside of collective bargaining, without demanding collective bargaining, but using mobilization, political, community, legal, media pressure and industrial activism like these strikes, which we have never seen at Wal-Mart in the United States up until last year, in order to try to transform the company’s business model.


AMY GOODMAN: Scott Nova, why are you here in New York?


SCOTT NOVA: We are here this week to meet with the comptroller of the city of New York, to participate in an event that he organized for investors, to talk about the enormous risks for investors that Wal-Mart’s reckless policies in Bangladesh are creating.


AMY GOODMAN: This is John Liu, who is also running for mayor.


SCOTT NOVA: Exactly, John Liu. The failure of Wal-Mart and Gap and other retailers to sign onto this critical fire safety agreement is not only, of course, extremely bad for workers, it’s ultimately bad for the shareholders of these companies, because the risk to the reputation of these companies, if there is another fire, if there is another building collapse, is enormous. But the executives are acting recklessly, refusing to acknowledge that risk and refusing to take the steps necessary to protect worker safety in their facilities in that country.


AMY GOODMAN: Kalpona Akter, as you travel the country, do you feel that there’s a different awareness about what’s going on in places like Bangladesh? And are you concerned that if you raise these concerns, that these corporations will just move to the next country?


KALPONA AKTER: In terms of the awareness, yeah, I mean, this is different level of awareness. If we consider like the last five years, I would say that the consumers—I mean, they are the main part of the supply chain, so they are more aware than before. And, of course, many things come—give awareness through the medias. And yeah, so this is really a different level I can see in these days. So—


AMY GOODMAN: And the issue of whether Bangladesh—


KALPONA AKTER: Yeah, I mean, this is really a big point, whether the—


AMY GOODMAN: And we have 10 seconds.


KALPONA AKTER: Yeah, whether these companies will be moved. I would say no, because Bangladesh is the world’s cheapest country in these days, and there is no alternative market for these retailers to move. So they should be keep doing their business. But in the same time, they should sign this accord and make a safe working place for our workers.


AMY GOODMAN: I want to thank you all for being with us. We’re going to do part two right after the show and post it at democracynow.org. Kalpona Akter, Bangladesh Center for Worker Solidarity; Scott Nova, Worker Rights Consortium; and Josh Eidelson writes for The Nation and In These Times and Salon.com.




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Striking Workers, Bangladeshi Activist Challenge Wal-Mart on Labor Conditions at Stores & Factories