Daily Dispatch

13 factory deaths caused by explosion of expired and unlicensed boiler

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NEW informatio­n on an explosion at a Bangladesh factory that killed 13 people this week sparked outrage among survivors, who accused the owners of ignoring their concerns.

A government inspector said a licence to use the 15-year-old boiler which exploded on Monday night had expired last month.

His comments came as survivors of the blast told local media they had alerted the factory’s owners of problems with the boiler, but their warnings went unheeded.

“The licence of the boiler expired on June 24. It’s a five-ton boiler and aged more than 15 years,” deputy chief inspector of the government’s boiler department Ziaul Hoque said.

“In our primary investigat­ion, we have found that the explosion occurred due to excessive pressure in the boiler.”

Most of the plant’s 5 000 workers were off for the Eid holidays when the boiler exploded during maintenanc­e work, causing a section of the sixstorey building to collapse.

It was the latest disaster to highlight the poor safety record of the country’s $30-billion (R400-billion) garment industry, the second largest in the world.

Local police chief Aminul Islam said at least 10 people had been charged, including three boiler operators who died in the explosion.

He said police would also prosecute the owners of the factory if they were proven to be at fault.

“The owners cannot avoid responsibi­lities,” Islam said.

“They [the operators] ran the boiler despite knowing that it was in bad their condition. If they had not started the boiler it would not have exploded.”

The plant in the Gazipur industrial district on the outskirts of Dhaka is owned by manufactur­er Multifabs, which makes clothing for brands including Littlewood­s and Aldi, according to its website.

One injured worker, who was receiving treatment at a nearby hospital, said the boiler was “beeping danger signals continuous­ly”, and he slammed factory authoritie­s for not replacing it.

“Within 10 minutes after we returned to work the boiler exploded,” Harunur Rashid told a local daily, Prothom Alo.

“It’s absolutely negligence.”

Multifabs owner Mahiuddin Faruqui said the company had applied to renew the boiler licence and promised compensati­on for the victims’ families.

“We applied for renewal boiler licence on June 19.

“But all the government offices were closed for Eid holidays that week,” he said.

The latest disaster comes four years after the collapse of the ninestorey Rana Plaza factory complex in April 2013 in which more than 1 100 people were killed.

In the wake of that disaster authoritie­s pledged to improve working conditions at factories, but accidents are still commonplac­e.

Only a few hundred of the country’s 4 500 textile factories have been certified as safe and last year a fire at a factory just kilometres from Rana Plaza claimed 34 lives. — AFP the authoritie­s’ of the

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