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By
Reuters
Published
Aug 1, 2010
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Bangladesh police break up textile workers protest

By
Reuters
Published
Aug 1, 2010

DHAKA, Aug 1 (Reuters) - Some 80 people were injured on Sunday as Bangladeshi police fired rubber bullets and teargas, and used batons to disperse angry textile workers protesting for a third day against a new minimum wage they say is too low.

Bangladesh
Photo : AFP

Bangladesh's garment industry employs more than 3.5 million workers, the majority of them women, and is the second biggest employer after agriculture.

Factories in Bangladesh make garments for international brands such as JC Penney, Wal-Mart, H&M, Kohl's, Marks & Spencer, Zara and Carrefour. But the sector has been hit by frequent violence and shutdowns in recent months.

The latest protests were called by unions rejecting a new minimum wage of 3,000 taka ($43) a month announced by the government on Thursday. The new minimum is nearly double the previous amount, but still far short of the 5,000 taka the workers demanded.

Police said a violent mob gathered at Ashulia and Savar, in the capital Dhaka's northern suburbs, blocking a highway for several hours, jeering at police and pelting them with bricks.
Protesters also barricaded a highway at Narayanganj, east of the capital, and battled with police, witnesses said.

Dozens of factories were closed on Sunday, a police officer at Ashulia said, adding that protesters attacked vehicles and broke into shops and looted goods.

Witnesses said nearly 80 people were injured in clashes as police dispersed hundreds of angry protesters.

Nearly 250 people, including policemen, were injured in similar violence over the past two days at Ashulia and other areas near the capital.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on Saturday urged workers not to indulge in activities that might destroy the key export sector which contributes some 80 percent of the country's annual $16 billion export income.

She said continuing unrest, that often disrupted production and damaged manufacturing plants, would not benefit workers, but instead could threaten their livelihoods.

Hasina asked workers to return to work peacefully while factory owners said they would reopen closed plants if order was restored.

Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association, representing more than 4,500 garment factories said they would be compelled to close down factories permanently if the situation did not improve.

Home Minister Sahara Kahtoon accused unnamed conspirators of trying to "destroy the vital employment and export sector as part of a bigger plan to destabilise the country and detract democracy."

"We will find out the conspirators and give them exemplary punishment," Sahara said on Sunday. "I urge all Bangladeshis to remain vigilant against conspiracies by vested quarters," she said in a reference usually made to opposition political parties. ($1 = 69.41 taka) (Writing by Anis Ahmed; Editing by Jon Hemming)

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