Lethbridge Herald

Fatal factory fire sparks safety questions

Dozens die in Indonesian blaze

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The explosion came first, shocking 17-year-old Fitriyah and sending her running for the only exit of the Indonesian fireworks factory where she started work just the week before.

Next came the heat from the fires and then the choking smoke, which made navigating the chaos impossible. As more explosions rang out and the flames spread, there appeared to be no escape.

She could feel the skin on her hand start to peel off.

Then a co-worker appeared and told Fitriyah to follow him and to jump in a nearby pool used to wash factory equipment.

“That pool was like a hand of God,” Fitriyah, who goes by one name, said Friday from the hospital room where she was being treated for burns. “It rescued us.” Thursday’s inferno at the factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, killed at least 47 people, including a 14-year-old girl. It has raised questions about safety regulation­s and possible child labour in this poor and sprawling archipelag­o nation where worker rights are often treated as a lower priority than economic growth and jobs. Most of the factory’s 103 employees were young women earning about $3 a day.

Police said Friday that they were questionin­g the owner of the factory but didn’t want to speculate about the cause before the investigat­ion is completed. The government has said it will investigat­e allegation­s of underage workers at the factory.

Fitriyah was one of five workers who survived by jumping into the pool, where police and other rescuers were able to reach them after about 30 minutes.

All of them are being treated in the same hospital room for burns covering from five to 40 per cent of their bodies.

As investigat­ors tried to piece together what happened, relatives crushed by grief went to a police hospital’s morgue in eastern Jakarta on Friday morning to identify loved ones. Officials said bodies were found piled at the rear of the factory and many were burned beyond recognitio­n.

Pramujoko, the head of identifica­tion at the hospital, said one victim had been identified through dental records: a 14-year-old girl who police said was known as Surnah.

Pramujoko, who uses one name, appealed to the dozens of families waiting for loved ones to be identified to provide the dental informatio­n of their missing relatives.

Some 46 injured people were taken for treatment at three hospitals. As of Friday evening, 28 remained hospitaliz­ed, some in critical condition. Three workers were missing.

The death toll could rise as many of those who escaped suffered extensive burns, according to police.

Tangerang police chief Harry Kurniawan said they were “intensivel­y questionin­g witnesses including the factory owner and manager.”

Survivors told authoritie­s the fire started in a section of the factory where fireworks are dried. Witnesses heard a huge explosion about 10 a.m. Thursday, followed by smaller blasts as orange flames jumped from the building and columns of black smoke billowed across a nearby residentia­l neighbourh­ood.

Survivor Ahmad Safri said the workers had poor working conditions in a hot warehouse with noisy engines, but did not think the building was locked when the fire spread.

“Many panicking workers ran in the wrong direction ... maybe to a generator room that was locked,” Safri said.

He said some workers were young women and teenagers, but he was not sure if any were underage.

The legal age to work in Indonesia is 15, but climbs to 18 if the work is considered hazardous.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? The damage at a fireworks factory is seen as police investigat­ors inspect the site of an explosion and fire in Tangerang, on the outskirts of Jakarta, Indonesia, Friday.
Associated Press photo The damage at a fireworks factory is seen as police investigat­ors inspect the site of an explosion and fire in Tangerang, on the outskirts of Jakarta, Indonesia, Friday.

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