Collapse: About 50 workers were inside the factory, south of the capital Phnom Penh, when the ceiling caved in |
Search: Cambodian rescue team and soldiers look for workers after a factory collapsed in Kampong Speu province |
Comb: Rescuers combed through rubble for several hours and after clearing the site said that nobody else was trapped inside |
Trade: The garment industry is Cambodia's biggest export earner |
Chea Muny, chief of a trade union for factory workers, identified the factory as a Taiwanese-owned operation called Wing Star that produces Asics sneakers for the Japanese sportswear label |
Production: The structure where the collapse occurred was mainly used as a storage warehouse for shoe-production equipment |
1,127 people in the global garment industry's deadliest disaster |
Business: In 2012, more than $4 billion worth of garment products were shipped to the United States and Europe |
- The ceiling collapsed on workers early this morning
- Heavy iron equipment stored on floor above appeared to have cause collapse
- Latest accident to spotlight lax safety conditions in garment industry
16 May 2013
By Jill Reilly
Daily Mail (UK)
The ceiling of a Cambodian factory that makes Asics sneakers collapsed
on workers this morning, killing two people and injuring seven, in the
latest accident to spotlight lax safety conditions in the global garment
industry.
About 50 workers were inside the factory, south of the capital Phnom
Penh, when the ceiling caved in, said police officer Khem Pannara.
He said heavy iron equipment stored on the floor above appeared to have caused the collapse.
Two bodies were pulled from the wreckage and seven people were injured,
he said. Rescuers combed through rubble for several hours and after
clearing the site said that nobody else was trapped inside.
'We were working normally and suddenly several pieces of brick and iron
started falling on us,' said an injured 25-year-old Kong Thary, crying
on the telephone as she recounted the scene from a nearby clinic.
Chea Muny, chief of a trade union for factory workers, identified the
factory as a Taiwanese-owned operation called Wing Star that produces
Asics sneakers for the Japanese sportswear label. He said shoes made at
the factory were imported to the United States and Europe.
The factory complex, which opened about a year ago, consists of several buildings.
The structure where the collapse occurred was mainly used as a storage
warehouse for shoe-production equipment but had a small work area where
people were gathered when the collapse occurred, Chea Muny said.
The garment industry is Cambodia's biggest export earner.
In 2012, more than $4 billion worth of products were shipped to the United States and Europe.
About 500,000 people work in more than 500 garment and shoe factories throughout the country.
The accident comes about three weeks after a building collapse in
Bangladesh that killed 1,127 people in the global garment industry's
deadliest disaster. Bangladesh is the third-biggest exporter of clothes
in the world, after China and Italy.
'This shows that the problem is not only isolated to Bangladesh, and
that companies (elsewhere) are trying to drive prices down by taking
shortcuts on workers' safety,' said Phil Robertson of Human Rights.
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