Bangladesh has set up a panel to raise the minimum wage for more than three million garment workers, a minister said today, after a series of disasters highlighted the poor conditions they endure.
"We've set up a minimum wage board for the garment sector. We did it in view of the workers' demand to hike their salaries," textile minister Abdul Latif Siddique told AFP.
A typical Bangladeshi garment worker takes home less than USD 40 a month, a wage that Pope Francis has condemned as akin to slave labour.
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"There is no doubt the salaries will be hiked," he said, adding that the government had also taken the rising cost of living into account before arriving at a decision.
The decision came as the death toll from the country's worst industrial disaster climbed to 1,126, 19 days after a nine-storey garment factory complex in a suburb of Dhaka caved in and buried thousands of workers.
The government announced a high-level panel last week to inspect thousands of garment factories for building flaws, amid fears that Western labels would turn their backs on Bangladesh after a series of deadly accidents hit the sector.
Last Thursday a garment factory fire in Dhaka killed eight people. Another fire last November killed 111 garment workers, the worst blaze in the history of the country's textile industry.