Mr. Chair and honourable members, you have heard from my colleague Duane McMullen about how the Government of Canada promotes corporate social responsibility, or CSR, globally. I will now outline for you how the Government of Canada responded to the collapse of the Rana Plaza building, housing several ready-made garment factories outside Dhaka, Bangladesh, on April 24, 2013.
At the time of the collapse, our embassy in Dhaka had been active in following developments in the ready-made garment sector and in promoting corporate social responsibility. In January 2013, it hosted a seminar titled Social Responsibility as a Safe Factory, which highlighted the importance of practising CSR in factories, with an emphasis on occupational health and safety, and fire safety. As Mr. McMullen mentioned, some 8,000 copies of a bilingual book—in English and Bengali—were produced and distributed to key contacts in Bangladesh in support of this Canadian-based values initiative.
Following the collapse, our department was contacted by Loblaw, owner of the Joe Fresh brand that had garments produced in Rana Plaza, and we provided advice and logistical support for senior executives who visited Dhaka in early May 2013. The Canadian High Commissioner to Bangladesh, Heather Cruden, arranged meetings for Loblaw executives with key stakeholders, including local government ministers and labours unions. A Loblaw executive returned to Bangladesh this past February and met again with our embassy. Loblaw and our department remain in close contact, and this relationship is a testament to the benefits of government responding to Canadian industry to collaborate in the improvement of working conditions in the Bangladesh ready-made garment sector.
The Canadian government has also been very engaged in policy dialogue and advocacy in this field. High Commissioner Cruden is a member of a group of ambassadors resident in Dhaka, ambassadors of like-minded countries of Canada, which meets monthly with high-level officials from the Government of Bangladesh, including the deputy ministers of foreign affairs, commerce, and labour.
The meetings provide an opportunity to monitor progress by the Government of Bangladesh on its commitments to improve conditions in the ready-made garments sector and for pressing for positive reforms. The Canadian High Commission also participated in stakeholder consultations regarding the minimum wage law in this sector and a needs assessment of the victims of the Rana Plaza.
I'd like to point out as well that the Canadian High Commission recently hosted a seminar on March 1, 2014, on social responsibility and the international standards implementing ISO 26000 in Bangladesh.
The Government of Canada has also tabled statements through our high commission in Dhaka to two separate Government of Bangladesh standing parliamentary committee hearings that addressed safe work environments and proposed amendments to the Government of Bangladesh's labour law.
Canada also intervened at the International Labour Organization's committee on the application of standards in June 2013, in Geneva, to express concern that Bangladesh's proposed updates to its labour law did not conform to international obligations under ILO Convention C087 with respect to freedom of association and protection of the right to organize.
At the most recent governing board of the ILO held in Geneva in March, just last month, Canada joined a statement by the Netherlands and the UK on trade unions in Bangladesh.
Last autumn, my colleague, Jeff Nankivell, and I travelled to Bangladesh for bilateral foreign policy consultations with the Government of Bangladesh, at which time we discussed in some detail the RMG sector at senior levels, including the deputy minister of foreign affairs and commerce minister. We emphasized the need for further reform to reinforce a message that has already been passed by our high commissioner in Dhaka, but also by me, as director general here in Ottawa, to the Bangladeshi high commissioner and the high commission here in Ottawa.
This trip demonstrated our newly integrated approach as an amalgamated department featuring foreign policy, trade, and development, during which we also visited a model factory.
As Mr. McMullen has alluded to, Employment and Social Development Canada hosted a tripartite round table on international labour issues on April 9, 2014, comprising government representatives, and labour and business organizations.
Jeff Nankivell and I, along with representatives from the ILO's better work program, the Retail Council of Canada, and the United Food and Commercial Workers Union, participated as panellists in the discussion on the ready-made garments sector in Bangladesh.
In April High Commissioner Cruden in Dhaka was appointed to the advisory board to the board of directors of the private Alliance for Bangladesh Worker Safety. As high commissioner she is actively engaged with both the alliance and the separate accord on fire and building safety in Bangladesh. Her appointment provides the opportunity for us to further influence and enhance coordination between the alliance and the accord to make sure that both efforts are more accountable and more effective.
In addition, Canada through official development assistance is providing $8 million over four years to a joint ILO-led initiative focused on improving worker conditions in Bangladesh's ready-made garment industry, together with our partners, the United Kingdom and the Netherlands. This project aims to strengthen the Government of Bangladesh's governance, regulation, and inspection of the garment sector; to implement labour legislation and policies, including those related to occupational health and safety at the factory level; and to facilitate coordination amongst stakeholders including the Government of Bangladesh, the accord, and the alliance.
As I draw my comments to a close I would like to point out that Canada has also funded two smaller projects related to this collapse, a research project with the Centre for Policy Dialogue on workers' rights and compliance and, with the Centre for the Rehabilitation of the Paralyzed, the socio-economic integration of nine persons severely injured in this terrible disaster.
Improving working conditions in Bangladesh is a major collective effort between governments, brands and buyers, workers and factory owners. Canada will continue to remain engaged on this issue.
Thank you for the opportunity to speak to you today.