Fighting for Bangladesh Labor, and Ending Up in Pauper’s Grave

Source: NY Times.

ASHULIA, Bangladesh — His tiny office was lost among the hulking garment factories that churn out cargo pants or polo shirts for brands like Gap or Tommy Hilfiger, yet workers managed to find Aminul Islam. They came with problems. Unpaid wages. Abusive bosses. Mr. Islam, a labor organizer, fought for their rights.

 

Security forces found Mr. Islam, too. His phone was tapped, the police regularly harassed him, and domestic intelligence agents once abducted and beat him, his co-workers and family say. More than once, he was told his advocacy for workers was hurting a country where garment exports drive the domestic economy.

And then no one could find Mr. Islam.

He disappeared April 4. Days later, his family discovered that he had been tortured and killed. His murder bore a grim familiarity in a country with a brutal legacy of politically motivated killings, and it raised a troubling question: Was he killed for trying to organize workers?

Five months later, Mr. Islam’s killing remains under investigation. There have been no arrests in the case, and the police say they have made little progress.

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Categories: Asia, Bangladesh

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1 reply

  1. I saw in a labor recruitment site (Sri Lanka) that textile workers were being recruited for a Jordanian textile factory. Free food, free accomodation and a monthly salary of: ONE HUNDRED FIFTY FIVE US.DOLLARS.

    For textile exports to the USA …

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