Prosecutors blame renovation firm for Morbi bridge collapse
Ahmedabad, India - Indian prosecutors have blamed a company that renovated a suspension bridge for its collapse at the weekend in
which more than 130 people were killed.
Contractors installed heavier flooring during work on the 150-year-old bridge in Morbi but did not replace a rusty main cable. Police believe the structure snapped due to excess weight when it was crowded with visitors on Sunday, plunging 135 people to their deaths in a river below.
Nine people linked to the Oreva group, a watch and e
bike manufacturing firm that had a contract to manage the bridge, have been arrested on manslaughter charges.
Oreva ‘hired contractors who were not qualified enough’, public prosecutor Harshendu Panchal told reporters after a remand hearing late on Tuesday.
“The main cable of the bridge was not changed during renovation,” he said.
“The police also believe that the weight of the bridge increased due to the fourlayer aluminium flooring done by the contractors, which may have resulted in the bridge collapse,” he added.
The 230-metre-long structure was only reopened
last Wednesday after nearly seven months of renovations that are said to have cost Rs 20mn.
Authorities in the western state of Gujarat say the proper safety certificates were not obtained before visitors were allowed to return. At least 47 of the victims were children.
Oreva had been awarded a 15-year contract by local authorities to operate and maintain the bridge but investigations have since found it had no prior experience on such projects.
However, Oreva group manager Deepak Parekh reportedly told the court: “It was the will of God that
such an unfortunate incident happened.”
He and another Oreva manager, along with two contractors, were remanded in police custody, while five ticket sellers and security guards for the bridge were sent to prison awaiting trial.