The Phnom Penh Post

One killed in accident

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$1,000 to the deceased worker’s family and cover funeral costs. The fund must also cover medical expenses for those injured, according to William Conklin, country director for the Solidarity Centre, who noted that the compensati­on process can take up to three months.

“Lost benefits for workers who get discharged from the hospital but have a recovery time is also a slow process,” he added.

Security guard Ty Sophon, 45, the husband of Samon, said he was informed of his wife’s death by a phone call from one of her friends. “I have no feeling. I was so shocked to hear that. I almost didn’t believe it happened. When I saw my wife’s body, I believed it. She died from a serious injury to her head from the machine,” he said.

The most seriously injured survivor in the blast was 23-yearold Khy Srey Moa, who sustained burns and laceration­s to her back and leg. Four months pregnant, she was at a loss for words. In an interview at her bedside in Preah Kossamak Hospital, her husband Yen Byn Ly, 26, said, “We do not know yet how it will affect my baby . . . I am very sad for my wife and baby.”

Currently, the loss of an unborn child, and compensati­on for trauma resulting from it, is “not really developed” under the law, but could be at the NSSF’s discretion, according to Conklin.

Reached for comment, factory representa­tive Li Xiao Ling said she was “at the police station”, before hanging up on a reporter and ignoring subsequent calls and emails.

Zhen Tai is a member of Better Factories Cambodia (BFC) an oversight program run by the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on. BFC’s program manager, Esther Germans, said in an email last night that machine safety is “the responsibi­lity of a factory”.

“They should have the systems in place to make sure that it is well maintained, inspected and well operated,” she said. However, she wrote, “we cannot draw any conclusion­s” as the investigat­ion into the incident is ongoing. BFC’s last inspection of Zhen Tai was in 2015.

Zhen Tai was previously implicated in two instances of mass fainting among staff in August 2011, which prompted ministeria­l visits, though officials at the time ruled that conditions there weren’t to blame.

While the technical specificat­ions of the boiler remain unknown, Conklin said that “if it’s a non-regulation type of device then there’s a real big gap

I was so shocked to hear that. I almost didn’t believe it happened.

in the inspection system”.

Levi’s suppliers must abide by the company’s terms of engagement, which include oversight for machine safety. In a statement to The Post, Levi Strauss & Co said it has started an investigat­ion into the incident, adding, “Levi Strauss & Co. remains committed to worker safety and extends our sympathy to those workers and their families who were affected by the explosion.”

 ?? ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY JOVINA CHUA ??
ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY JOVINA CHUA
 ?? PHA LINA ?? Two of the seven victims of an explosion at a Chinese-owned garment factory get treatment at the Preah Kossamak Hospital yesterday in Phnom Penh.
PHA LINA Two of the seven victims of an explosion at a Chinese-owned garment factory get treatment at the Preah Kossamak Hospital yesterday in Phnom Penh.

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