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Bangladesh opens murder trial over factory disaster
The 38 defendants are the first to go on trial for the 2013 collapse of the Rana Plaza garment factory in Bangladesh that killed over 1,100 people. They have been formally charged with murder, including the owners of the building and factories housed inside. If convicted, they face the death penalty. The disaster highlighted safety issues in Bangladesh's large garment industry and triggered calls for reforms to improve conditions for the four million workers.
Bangladesh opens murder trial over factory disaster
The 38 defendants are the first to go on trial for the 2013 collapse of the Rana Plaza garment factory in Bangladesh that killed over 1,100 people. They have been formally charged with murder, including the owners of the building and factories housed inside. If convicted, they face the death penalty. The disaster highlighted safety issues in Bangladesh's large garment industry and triggered calls for reforms to improve conditions for the four million workers.
Bangladesh opens murder trial over factory disaster
The 38 defendants are the first to go on trial for the 2013 collapse of the Rana Plaza garment factory in Bangladesh that killed over 1,100 people. They have been formally charged with murder, including the owners of the building and factories housed inside. If convicted, they face the death penalty. The disaster highlighted safety issues in Bangladesh's large garment industry and triggered calls for reforms to improve conditions for the four million workers.
DHAKA: A Bangladesh court Monday formally charged 38 people with
murder over the 2013 collapse of a garment factory that killed more than 1,100 people, one of the worlds worst industrial disasters. The 38 defendants are the first to go on trial for the disaster at the Rana Plaza compound, which highlighted appalling safety standards in Bangladeshs $28 billion garment export industry, the worlds second largest after China. "In all 41 people were charged. Among them 38, were indicted with murder and the other three for helping the main criminal, Sohel Rana, to escape," prosecutor Abdul Mannan told AFP after the trial opened in a Dhaka court. If convicted of murder the defendants, who include the owners of the building and of factories housed inside, face the death penalty. At least 1,138 people died in the tragedy. Rescuers struggled for weeks to retrieve the bodies from the ruins but some people are still unaccounted for. The disaster triggered demands for Western retailers to help introduce sweeping reforms including new safety inspections and higher wages in the industry, which employs around four million workers.