Yahoo - AFP, December 21, 2015
A Bangladesh court Monday ordered the arrest of 24 people and seizure of their assets after they failed to turn up to face murder charges over the collapse of a garment factory that killed more than 1,100 people.
The Rana
Plaza garment factory building collapsed in Savar, on the outskirts
of Dhaka,
in April 2013 killing more than 1,100 people
|
A Bangladesh court Monday ordered the arrest of 24 people and seizure of their assets after they failed to turn up to face murder charges over the collapse of a garment factory that killed more than 1,100 people.
Senior
judicial magistrate Mohammad Al Amin issued the warrants after his court
accepted the murder charges against the 24 fugitives for the collapse in April
2013 of the Rana Plaza factory compound, one of the world's worst industrial
disasters.
"The
court accepted the charge sheet against 41 people who have been charged with
murder over the Rana Plaza disaster," prosecutor Anwarul Kabir told AFP.
Factfile
on the 2013 Rana Plaza factory collapse in Bangladesh that killed over 1,100 garment workers. |
Kabir said the court had accepted the charges against four government factory and building inspectors despite attempts by their departments to shield them from prosecution by citing public servant immunity rules.
The case
was delayed by "several months" due to the non-clearance by the
various departments, Kabir said, adding that prosecutors now expect the trial
to start by April next year.
Among the
41 who have been charged with murder is Sohel Rana, the owner of the
nine-storey complex on the outskirts of Dhaka which collapsed on April 24,
2013, at the start of the working day.
Rana, who
is in custody awaiting trial, became Bangladesh's public enemy number one after
survivors recounted how they were forced to start work despite complaints about
cracks developing in the walls the previous day.
At least
1,138 people are known to have died in the tragedy, the worst in the country's
history. Rescue workers struggled for weeks to retrieve the bodies from the
ruins but several people are still unaccounted for.
More than
2,000 people were injured, including many who lost limbs.
Seven
owners of factories housed in the complex and 12 government officials
responsible for safety and inspections were also charged with murder.
Workers 'slapped'
Bangladeshi
property tycoon Sohel Rana is among
the 41 who have been charged with murder
over
the 2013 factory collapse
|
Workers 'slapped'
Rana's
parents, who jointly owned the building with him, and the mayor and councillor
of the town of Savar where it was located, were also charged.
Those
facing arrest including "associates of Rana" who "slapped and
forced" the workers to join the shift, Kabir said.
In a
separate case Rana and 41 others have been charged with violating building
codes and with illegally extending the six-storey building, which was initially
approved as a shopping mall, into a nine-storey factory complex.
The
disaster highlighted appalling safety problems in Bangladesh's $30 billion
garment industry and triggered global concern as protesters marched to demand
action from Western retailers.
A host of
such retailers had clothing made at the five factories housed at Rana Plaza,
including Italy's Benetton, Spain's Mango and the British low-cost chain
Primark.
The
disaster prompted sweeping reforms including new safety inspections and higher
wages in the industry which employs about four million workers.
Two groups
of top retailers such as Walmart and H&M have since launched drives to
clean up the sourcing factories. They hired engineers to review fire, building
and electrical safety in thousands of garment plants.
Under the
clean-up campaign, engineers have identified safety problems in each of the
plants, and drawn up recommendations for upgrades as well as setting deadlines
for the owners to implement remedial measures.
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