
(Photo: Dorepo)
Bart Simpson and the Kader fire commemoration
- May 21, 2005
Asiper writes: The photo above is from May 10 - Safety day. Workers,
labour organizations, and NGOs gather in front of the Ministry Labour
to commemorate of 12th anniversary of the Kader fire. On the left is
a model of the Kader memorial statue. Next are photos of Kader victims
and then a wreath made of dolls produced at the factory which reads
"12nd anniversary of Kader fire." On the right is a large
Bart SImpson effigy that reads "How many people will die, how many
people will have disabilities so we will get the Institute of Occupational
Health Safety and Environment at the workplace?" And Thaksin's
name is at the bottom.
[An Institute of Occupational Health Safety and Environment is supposed
to be set up, but labour organizations oppose government attempts to
make it a state enterprise and not an independent organization.]
|
Melted
Bart - May 4, 2003
On May 10, 1993 a fire broke out in the Kader Toy Factory in Thailand
and 189 workers died.
It was the height of the Simpsons
craze and the factory was producing Simpsons toys. After the fire,
labor activists collected discarded toys and a melted Bart became
a symbol of the tragedy.
Malaysian labor activist Tian
Chua writes: ...The bodies of
Bart Simpson scattered all over the ground - some half burned,
some without heads or limbs, some half completed. There were many
other toys too. But the bright yellow color of the Simpsons stood
up most vividly on the black ashes. Kader was one of the largest
toy manufacturers in Asia. It was also a typical multinational
company which moved around for cheap labour. Kader was jointly
owned by Thai and Hong Kong capitalists. It mainly produced toys
for European & American markets. The doll of the Simpsons
was the latest hot item for kids that year.
|
(Photo: ANROAV.org)
|

(Photo: 2Bangkok.com)
Above: The Thai
Labor Museum salvaged some of the toys from the ruined factory.
|
The toy industry is a sector which produces
fun and joy. Toys bring laughter to children and parents. However,
the tragedy of Kader fire revealed the sorrows and suffering behind
toy manufacturing. Kader made us aware that workers use their sweat,
tear and blood to exchange happiness for children around the world...
(Tian Chua wrote this from prison. He has been detained in a Malaysian
prison since April 10, 2001 without
charge for attempting to organize Malaysian workers without
government permission.)
The Asian Network for the Rights of Occupational Accident Victims
(Anroav.org) has a special issue
of their newsletter on the 10th anniversary of the tragedy that
can be downloaded here.
BTW: 1993 was not a good year for industrial accidents in Asia.
In June, a cage elevator in Hong Kong fell and killed 12 workers
and in November the Zhili Toy Factory fire broke out in Shenzhen,
China. It led to 87 deaths. |
Right: Poster lamenting the lack of
a Occupational Health and Safety Authority in Thailand. (Photo:
2Bangkok.com)
Kader fire anniversary
- May 10, 2003
Today is the 10th anniversary of the Kader fire disaster. There
will be demonstrations in front of the former factory site in
Nakhon Pratom province and stones for a memorial will be laid.
On Sunday, May 11, seminars on the disaster will be held in the
Tubtim Room at the Royal Hotel (across from Sanam Luang).
We have been informed that the Labour Minister has agreed to attend
and open the ceremonies at the Kader factory site this morning.
|
 |
|

(Photo: 2Bangkok.com)
|
The
Real Tragedy of the Kader Factory Fire
- The Irrawaddy, May 9, 2003
A decade after the worst industrial accident in Thai history,
safety and health reform in the workplace has progressed at
a glacial pace.
BTW: The Irrawaddy has used a photo from 2Bangkok.com,
but credited it "Thai Labour Museum."
ANROAV newsletter
The Asian Network for the Rights of Occupational Accident
Victims (Anroav.org) has a
special issue of their newsletter on the 10th anniversary
of the tragedy that can be downloaded here.
Right: Detail of a
Kader fire remembrance t-shirt (Photo: 2Bangkok.com)
More on the Simpsons
in Thailand
|
|