Huffington Magazine Issue 49 | Page 28

Voices the brand, no matter how diligently it may scrutinize its supply chain, the global nature of largescale manufacturing entails so many hands touching products in so many different places, no system can keep tabs on all of them. And that, combined with the pressures incumbent on factories to produce clothes at the lowest possible prices, ensures that some of this production will wind up taking place in the underground market — beyond the purview of local regulators, and outside the realm of the lawyered-up codes of conduct that supposedly govern modern commerce. There was ample evidence for this reality long ago. But in the wake of the deadliest garment industry disaster in history — the collapse of a factory complex in Bangladesh, which took the lives of more than 900 people — this truth is more evident than ever. This truth explains how Benetton — a prominent brand that has marketed itself as an archetype of global style — now finds itself cast as the latest poster child of the sweatshop conditions that put clothes in our closets. First, the company said none of its products had been made inside PETER S. GOODMAN HUFFINGTON 05.19.13 the doomed Bangladesh factory. Then, after photographs taken at the scene of the disaster revealed Benetton products strewn in the rubble, the company said that, yes, it had once placed an order. Then, in an exclusive interview with my colleague Kim Bhasin last week, Benetton’s chief executive officer confirmed that the company had indeed purchased about 200,000 cotton shirts from a supplier in- Bangladesh is poor, and poverty is dangerous. But these tragedies are systemic.” side the factory, though it was a relationship of short duration. The confusion, Benetton executives explained, came from the fact that the order had initially been placed with another supplier in India. When the Indian firm struggled to fulfill the order, it shifted some of the work to another factory — the plant in Bangladesh. Benetton presumably had to move quickly to keep the product moving. That meant taking a leap of faith that shifting to another factory — a company Benetton has ac-