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No Room to Move
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No Room to Move: Radical Art and the Regenerate City
A fistful of research on the state of critical public art in the maelstrom of New Labour's regeneration programmes.
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Bangladesh; garment workers attack factories as thousands wildcat and riot News & Analysis
Submitted by anthony on Wednesday, 13 August, 2008 - 10:04
Ret Marut

Another update on the Bangladesh garment/textile workers actions against their employers' property and the police re-posted from Libcom. These activities seem to be taking an increasingly Luddite turn which suggests that without unions recourse to property destruction is proving to be the most relevant strategy available to the Bangladesh working class to pursue their demands - what Eric Hobsbawm called 'collective bargaining by riot'. The ongoing unrest in the garment factories continues...

From: http://libcom.org/news/bangladesh-garment-workers-attack-factories-thousands-wildcat-riot-11082008

Savar, Dhaka area; thousands of garment workers came out on strike over the weekend in a new outbreak of unrest. On Friday 8th Aug two workers on the overnight 'graveyard' shift at Biswas Synthetics Limited were caught sleeping by 'ansar men', who then assaulted them. (Ansars are a civilian volunteer defence group, an auxiliary to the professional security forces; they have had numerous clashes with garment workers in recent years. Their disciplinary role in this workplace is an indication of the high level of class struggle now occurring.)

Already unhappy with the ansar military presence in the factory, for hundreds of workers arriving for the Saturday morning shift hearing of the assault was the last straw; 400 mainly women workers had recently been sacked with no warning and without receiving wages owed. The new shift refused to begin work and demonstrated for payment of wage arrears, punishment of the ansars, and removal of the factory manager. The factory bosses failing to respond, at 9.30am a scuffle occurred between demonstrators and ansars, who retreated to their camp in the factory grounds. Workers then attacked the ansar camp with sticks, stones and bricks. The ansars responded with rifle fire into the crowd, injuring at least two workers with serious leg wounds.

Workers spent the next four hours vandalisng the factory until a huge contingent of police and soldiers arrived and eventually brought the situation under control by 2pm. The ansar camp has since been removed from the factory.

Dhaka, the capital; on Sunday morning 300 workers of Polonia Garments Ltd gathered in expectation of payment of owed wages, as promised by management. Finding the factory gates locked, furious workers began ransacking the factory. Events escalated when over 1,000 workers from neighbouring factories - armed with bamboo sticks and stones - joined Polonia workers and attacked other factories on the Dhaka-Tangail highway. Highway traffic was blocked for two hours.

Workers spread the trouble throughout the area; 15 factories RMG factories and four shopping centres were attacked as rioting continued through the day. Strikes demanding pay rises occurred in at least three other factories and 60 factories were closed in response to the violence. Later, at around 8:30pm, roving workers set fire to an RMG factory in Gazipur, damaging a huge quantity of fabrics and yarns.

Concessions won
As inflation continues to eat into workers wages and demonstrations and strikes increase, the employers' organisation - Bangladesh Knitwear Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BKMEA) - has announced it will open five 'fair price shops' to sell subsidised staple foods to its workers. They have also hinted at an 'inflation allowance' (probably 20% of current wages) being paid.


A more detailed account with
anthony - Tue, 19/08/2008 - 11:38am

A more detailed account with more updates and analysis recently appeared on Libcom:

Bangladesh: carrot and stick - security forces fire on garment workers as government recalls unions

http://libcom.org/news/bangladesh-carrot-stick-security-forces-fire-garment-workers-government-recalls-unions-1608

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