Eastern Eye (UK)

‘Child workers among factory fire victims’

OWNER HELD AS UN SEEKS BETTER SAFETY STANDARDS IN BANGLADESH

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THE owner of a factory where 52 people died in a fire was arrested for murder last Saturday (10) as it emerged that children as young as 11 had been working there.

Police said Abul Hashem and four of his sons were among eight people detained over the inferno, which broke out last Thursday (8) and raged for more than a day. A separate inquiry has been launched into the use of child labour at the food factory.

Jayedul Alam, police chief for Narayangan­j district where the factory is located, said the entrance had been padlocked along with multiple other breaches of safety regulation­s.

“It was a deliberate murder,” the police chief said. Before his arrest, Hashem told the Daily Star newspaper the fire “may have been a result of workers’ carelessne­ss” and a discarded cigarette could have sparked the carnage.

Emergency services found 48 bodies on the third floor of the Hashem Food and Beverage factory in Rupganj, an industrial town outside Dhaka.

The fire department said the exit door to the main staircase had been padlocked and highly flammable chemicals and plastics had been stored in the building.

Monnujan Sufian, state minister for labour, said inquiries had begun into the use of child workers at the factory.

Laizu Begum, who spent hours waiting outside the factory for news of her 11-year-old nephew, said he had been working on the third floor.

“We heard the door of the floor where my nephew worked was padlocked. Then we realised after seeing how big the fire was that he is probably dead,” said the woman.

Outside the burned shell of the factory and at the hospital morgue, more than two dozen survivors and relatives of the dead claimed child workers at the factory were paid just 20 taka (24 US cents) per hour.

Bilal Hossain, whose 14-year-old daughter was among the missing, went to the Dhaka Medical College Hospital morgue with a photo, begging police and doctors to find her remains.

“I sent my baby girl to die,” said Hossain, who added that the company owed the girl back wages. “How will I tell her mother?”

Chandu Mia held a photo of his 15-year-old daughter. “I am not sure if she is alive,” he said, teary-eyed.

State minister Sufian said she had spoken to two survivors aged 14.

“I went to the hospital and I asked them how old they are. The youngest were 14,” she said.

Sufian said some children of 14 were allowed to work in non-hazardous jobs, but that the Hashem factory was considered hazardous.

“If child labour is proved, we will take action against the owner and the inspectors,” she said.

Bangladesh pledged safety reforms after the Rana Plaza disaster in 2013, when a nine-storey complex collapsed killing more than 1,100 people.

But there has been a series of fires and other disasters since then. At least 70 people died in February 2019 when fire tore through Dhaka apartments where chemicals were illegally stored.

Unions said the latest disaster has again showed how labour and factory laws are poorly enforced.

The Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on, a UN agency, said the blaze “illustrate­s the urgent need” for Bangladesh authoritie­s and building owners to ensure that factories meet national safety standards.

 ??  ?? DEADLY INFERNO: People gather after a fire broke out in a factory in Rupganj, Narayangan­j district, near Dhaka, last Friday (9); (inset left)
firefighte­rs act to douse the fire
DEADLY INFERNO: People gather after a fire broke out in a factory in Rupganj, Narayangan­j district, near Dhaka, last Friday (9); (inset left) firefighte­rs act to douse the fire

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