Sandblasting is a technique to give the “worn-out-look” to jeans.
Many brands sourcing denim from Bangladesh have declared that they no
longer use sandblasting to fade their products. The ban had been adopted
by scores of brands in the last year after the process was proved to
cause fatal lung diseases, including silicosis. However our new report
reveals that regardless of whether a brand has ‘banned’ sandblasting or
not, sandblasting - both manual and mechanical – is still commonly used.
Our research clearly shows that not only manual but also mechanical
sandblasting poses a deadly risk to Bangladeshi garment workers.
One factory owner interviewed stated that it was impossible to
produce some of the designs requested without the use of sandblasting.
Indeed workers said they are told to switch to using sandblasting, even
if a buyer has said it is not be used, in order to meet production
deadlines. Others stated that production was often carried out at night
to avoid detection by inspectors and auditors.
Workers interviewed suffered from constant coughing and breathing
difficulties. They were using old machinery, and were forced to work up
to twelve hours a day in dusty, poorly ventilated rooms, without
adequate health and safety protection. Most interviewed had colleagues
who had fallen ill. The report highlights the lack of medical care
provided to workers and the difficulties they face in getting adequate
diagnosis and treatment.
The Clean Clothes Campaign and partners are now calling on brands to
take more action to end all forms of sandblasting. This includes ceasing
production in any unit which carries out either manual or mechanical
sandblasting production, making changes to the design of the jeans and
working with local trade unions and workers' rights organisations to
ensure the ban is being respected.
CCC is also calling on national governments to ban the process and
for the EU to introduce an import ban on sandblasted products. The CCC
also wants to see the garment industry included in the World Health
Organisation/International Labour Organisation work on the elimination
of silicosis and to develop a national programme in Bangladesh.
The report was released at a press conference in Geneva on 29th
March. Just prior to the release CCC held an experts meeting on the
continued use of sandblasting in denim production and the need to
develop proper models of compensation workers affected or potentially
affected by silicosis. The ILO was present at the meeting as were
several CCC partners and former sandblasting workers from Turkey and
Bangladesh
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