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Bangladesh Supreme Court pushes Dhaka tanneries out 

Government, owners need to be sincere and aware about environmental protection, says church official
Bangladesh Supreme Court pushes Dhaka tanneries out 

A worker processes wet-blue leather at a tannery in Dhaka in this 2014 file photo. The billion-dollar industry is blamed for massive environmental and pubic health damages and has been ordered to move out of the city. (ucanews.com photo)

Published: March 15, 2017 10:20 AM GMT
Updated: March 15, 2017 10:20 AM GMT

Environmental activists have hailed the Bangladesh Supreme Court for ordering Dhaka's billion-dollar tannery industry to move out of the capital city.

A three-member bench ordered shutting down of 155 tanneries in Dhaka, dismissing a petition filed by Bangladesh Finished Leather, Leather Goods and Footwear Exporters Association for a stay on an earlier High Court order.

The court ordered the tanneries to shut operations by March 31 and asked ministries of industries and environment as well police to ensure implementation of the order by cutting water, gas and electricity supplies by the deadline.

Bangladesh's tannery industry, centered in the Hazaribagh neighborhood next the Buriganga River, consists of 155 factories and employs about 30,000 workers. The industry earns more than US$1 billion annually from leather and finished leather goods exports, mostly to European markets.

However, the industry is blamed for massive environmental and public health problems.

Theophil Nokrek, secretary of Catholic bishops' Justice and Peace Commission hailed the "landmark" court verdict for insisting on environmental protection and labor rights.

"All the concerned parties including the government and owners need to be sincere and aware about environmental protection in the new site, so that it doesn't turn into a second Hazaribagh with regards to pollution," Nokrek told ucanews.com.

"Workers are worried about their accommodation and other facilities in the new place. The owners can offer them what they need and the government must pressurize owners to ensure all the facilities for the workers are received," he said.

In a 2012 report Human Rights Watch documented serious health repercussions to tannery workers and local residents as well as environmental pollution caused by this mostly unregulated industry.

Amid pressure from foreign buyers and multiple warnings from the Bangladesh High Court, the government decided to relocate the industry to Savar, just outside Dhaka, in 2003, acquiring about 81 hectares for the project.

 

A worker sprays  tanned leather pieces at a tannery in Dhaka in this 2014 photo. The billion-dollar industry is blamed for massive environmental and pubic health damages. (ucanews.com photo)     

 

For years, the process stalled due to wrangling over compensation packages and construction issues.

"Tannery owners buy rawhides and machines cheaply and exploit cheap labor but make huge profits, degrading the environment and public health and they have [polluted] Buriganga River. If they move to the new industrial estate they need to invest in modern equipment and infrastructure which they are reluctant to pay for," said Syeda Rizwana Hasan, chief executive of Bangladesh Environment Lawyers' Association, who filed the petition to push the tanners out.

Mizanur Rahman, vice-president of Bangladesh Tanners' Association, said they would act according to court order.

"We must obey the court order and move to Savar. We have been appealing to our prime minister to ensure some facilities for us including relocation costs, low interest back loans and easy access to utility services," Rahman, owner of Helena Enterprise Tannery told ucanews.com.

"We are concerned about the environment. If the issue of pollution surfaces again, we might lose our buyers and this industry will be destroyed," he added.

Environmental activists have often accused the vast majority of tanneries in Bangladesh of not using any effluent treatment plants, particularly tanneries in Hazaribagh.

Hence, they are discharging their effluents in the drains, and the nearby Buriganga River and into the nearby fields. Such indiscriminate disposal is destroying the nearby environment leaving the area contaminated with high amounts of hazardous sodium and other heavy metals.

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