Dubai Telegraph - Murder trial over Bangladesh factory collapse resumes after five years

EUR -
AED 4.021916
AFN 77.715092
ALL 99.795871
AMD 424.413737
ANG 1.96025
AOA 1004.100762
ARS 1174.754031
AUD 1.740029
AWG 1.973709
AZN 1.855889
BAM 1.966539
BBD 2.191588
BDT 131.900273
BGN 1.962815
BHD 0.412715
BIF 3226.490479
BMD 1.094984
BND 1.458779
BOB 7.499818
BRL 6.20399
BSD 1.085437
BTN 92.775777
BWP 15.023175
BYN 3.552195
BYR 21461.694707
BZD 2.180286
CAD 1.556415
CDF 3143.700491
CHF 0.954739
CLF 0.027274
CLP 1046.629605
CNY 7.958458
CNH 8.001593
COP 4545.554089
CRC 545.297648
CUC 1.094984
CUP 29.017087
CVE 110.869416
CZK 24.960136
DJF 193.287256
DKK 7.460775
DOP 68.54682
DZD 146.744309
EGP 55.407523
ERN 16.424766
ETB 143.687552
FJD 2.548959
FKP 0.843924
GBP 0.836015
GEL 3.022407
GGP 0.843924
GHS 16.823562
GIP 0.843924
GMD 78.29093
GNF 9393.15138
GTQ 8.37365
GYD 227.759575
HKD 8.521098
HNL 27.770903
HRK 7.537767
HTG 142.266368
HUF 400.486718
IDR 18333.433707
ILS 4.074382
IMP 0.843924
INR 93.783556
IQD 1421.903601
IRR 46112.533719
ISK 143.925045
JEP 0.843924
JMD 171.40067
JOD 0.776236
JPY 161.125892
KES 141.526376
KGS 95.012341
KHR 4342.307049
KMF 496.558643
KPW 985.545154
KRW 1603.533524
KWD 0.337277
KYD 0.904548
KZT 546.257961
LAK 23512.610955
LBP 97254.747316
LKR 321.23592
LRD 217.083453
LSL 20.282212
LTL 3.233204
LVL 0.662345
LYD 5.24871
MAD 10.442533
MDL 19.466837
MGA 5074.758275
MKD 61.564204
MMK 2298.869381
MNT 3825.282419
MOP 8.701857
MRU 43.188234
MUR 49.679429
MVR 16.874043
MWK 1881.893716
MXN 22.091198
MYR 4.880893
MZN 69.973514
NAD 20.281839
NGN 1683.275408
NIO 39.94286
NOK 11.340584
NPR 148.443969
NZD 1.901621
OMR 0.421591
PAB 1.085427
PEN 3.98657
PGK 4.477491
PHP 62.496211
PKR 304.023972
PLN 4.174902
PYG 8689.530614
QAR 3.957173
RON 4.978566
RSD 117.197265
RUB 92.249967
RWF 1540.037873
SAR 4.107773
SBD 9.117677
SCR 15.716269
SDG 657.545259
SEK 10.723286
SGD 1.46994
SHP 0.860486
SLE 24.998537
SLL 22961.277061
SOS 620.304315
SRD 40.075886
STD 22663.966809
SVC 9.496947
SYP 14237.755608
SZL 20.27289
THB 37.531133
TJS 11.846985
TMT 3.843395
TND 3.364743
TOP 2.564563
TRY 41.526411
TTD 7.36462
TWD 36.341992
TZS 2890.712918
UAH 44.887227
UGX 3958.544273
USD 1.094984
UYU 45.738933
UZS 14028.477736
VES 76.568549
VND 28256.073057
VUV 135.306562
WST 3.101908
XAF 659.570791
XAG 0.032905
XAU 0.00035
XCD 2.95925
XDR 0.820287
XOF 659.564734
XPF 119.331742
YER 268.982618
ZAR 20.723182
ZMK 9856.17187
ZMW 30.255494
ZWL 352.584538
  • RBGPF

    67.7200

    67.72

    +100%

  • BCC

    3.1600

    102.07

    +3.1%

  • NGG

    0.0000

    65.78

    0%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.04

    +0.46%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.83

    +0.04%

  • RELX

    0.3100

    50.98

    +0.61%

  • RIO

    -0.3300

    59.9

    -0.55%

  • CMSC

    0.0600

    22.5

    +0.27%

  • BCE

    -0.9600

    21.82

    -4.4%

  • SCS

    0.1400

    11.46

    +1.22%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    9.77

    -0.1%

  • GSK

    -0.2300

    37.64

    -0.61%

  • VOD

    -0.1500

    9.12

    -1.64%

  • BTI

    -0.8500

    40.25

    -2.11%

  • BP

    0.0000

    33.81

    0%

  • AZN

    -0.3800

    72.22

    -0.53%

Murder trial over Bangladesh factory collapse resumes after five years
Murder trial over Bangladesh factory collapse resumes after five years

Murder trial over Bangladesh factory collapse resumes after five years

Bangladesh has resumed the murder trial over one of the world's most devastating factory disasters after five years mired in appeals and court procedure, prosecutors told AFP on Tuesday.

Text size:

More than 1,130 workers died in 2013 when a nine-floor warren of textile factories in the capital Dhaka fell down.

The collapse of Rana Plaza -- where clothes for top fast fashion brands such as Zara, Primark and Benetton were produced -- highlighted unsafe conditions in the country's lucrative garment industry and triggered mass protests demanding action from global retailers.

A court in 2016 charged 41 people with murder for signing off on building standards and forcing employees to work despite cracks appearing in the complex the day before the disaster.

But the case was halted for more than five years while several defendants tried to get their charges vacated, and the country's high court suspended the indictments of two local officials accused of approving the shoddy building.

On Monday, a judge ordered the trial resumed for 36 of the original defendants -- three have since died -- while a prosecution request to vacate the two suspended indictments will be considered separately.

"We want to conclude the trial as quickly as possible. Already too much time has been wasted," chief public prosecutor Sheikh Hemayet Hossain told AFP.

"The building didn't have any (construction) plan. It would shake when machines were switched on. And the owner of the building, Sohel Rana, used hired muscle to force the workers to go to work on the day of the collapse."

Hossain said all of the accused except Rana have been free on bail.

Rana's father, who was a co-owner of the complex, is among the defendants who died before facing trial, fellow prosecutor Shamsur Rahman said.

- 'Of course we want justice' -

Bangladesh's economy has soared in recent years, largely on the back of its $35 billion garment trade, which accounts for more than 80 percent of the country's exports.

The industry is second in size only to China's, but fires and factory collapses are common due to lax building regulations and improperly kept volatile chemicals.

Its operators are also a powerful political lobby, and Rana's connections to the ruling Awami League party have been widely reported in local media.

He became a nationally reviled figure after the disaster, with survivors recounting how they were slapped and threatened into working on the day of the collapse.

Rescue workers struggled for weeks to retrieve the bodies from the ruins, but some of those in Rana Plaza that day are still unaccounted for.

"We haven't got justice for nine years," said former garment worker Rehana Akhter, 35, whose left leg was amputated after she was trapped in the complex.

"Of course we want justice. They should keep (Rana) alive so that he could look after the amputees like me and all other victims."

Y.Al-Shehhi--DT