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Thu Sep 20, 2012, 12:35 AM

Inspectors Certified Pakistani Factory as Safe Before Disaster

Source: NYT

A prominent factory monitoring group heavily financed by industry gave a clean bill of health to a Pakistani apparel plant last month, just weeks before a fire engulfed the premises and killed nearly 300 workers, many of them trapped behind locked exit doors.

In August, two inspectors who visited the factory, Ali Enterprises in Karachi, to examine working conditions gave it a prestigious SA8000 certification, meaning it had met international standards in nine areas, including health and safety, child labor and minimum wages. The two inspectors were working on behalf of Social Accountability International, a nonprofit monitoring group based in New York that obtains much of its financing from corporations and relies on 21 affiliates around the world to do most of its inspections.

Weeks later, a fire swept the plant on Sept. 12, trapping hundreds of workers in a building with barred windows and just one open exit, resulting in one of the worst industrial disasters in history — one that killed nearly twice as many workers as the landmark Triangle shirtwaist factory fire of 1911 in New York.

The Karachi tragedy is a huge embarrassment to the factory monitoring system, in which many Western garment and electronics companies rely on auditing groups to provide a coveted seal of approval to their low-cost suppliers in the developing world.

Read more: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/20/world/asia/pakistan-factory-passed-inspection-before-fire.html?pagewanted=all

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Reply Inspectors Certified Pakistani Factory as Safe Before Disaster (Original post)
alp227 Sep 2012 OP
Mojorabbit Sep 2012 #1
AmyDeLune Sep 2012 #2
davidpdx Dec 2012 #4
davidpdx Dec 2012 #3

Response to alp227 (Original post)

Thu Sep 20, 2012, 01:09 AM

1. This is awful nt

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Response to alp227 (Original post)

Thu Sep 20, 2012, 03:08 AM

2. This pretty much explains it all

Ms. Kaufman of Social Accountability International said the two inspectors spent four days at the Karachi plant. She noted that because this was an initial audit for certification, the plant’s managers had been warned of the visit. She said future inspections would have been without advance notice.

Tessel Pauli, coordinator for the Clean Clothes Campaign, a European antisweatshop group, criticized the audit process.

“Workers are often told what to tell the auditor,” she said. “The inspections are announced, and there is time to do things like open exit doors that other times are locked.”

After the Ali Enterprises fire, some surviving workers said they had been warned of a visit by inspectors and coached to lie about their working conditions, under threat of dismissal.


Places like this always clean up their act when they know an inspection is coming. *sigh*

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Response to AmyDeLune (Reply #2)

Sun Dec 9, 2012, 06:50 AM

4. To add to my first comment below...

The woman who ran Ali Enterprises should be tried as well. Ignorance isn't an excuse.

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Response to alp227 (Original post)

Sun Dec 9, 2012, 06:48 AM

3. I think some of these people need to be tried under US law

Last edited Sun Dec 9, 2012, 06:51 AM USA/ET - Edit history (2)

Let Pakistan deal with the two brothers if they want, I understand that is personal for them. Everyone else involved had connections to US companies. All the non-Americans should be extradited and brought to the US and tried under US law. It sounds like there is some serious fraud going on which would fall under the Foreign Corruption Practices Act. It would also make the large companies that bought merchandise out of these factories squirm like a baby.

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