The Prague Post - Murder trial over Bangladesh factory collapse resumes after five years

EUR -
AED 4.324763
AFN 81.255146
ALL 97.039309
AMD 451.164382
ANG 2.10839
AOA 1079.865074
ARS 1726.378398
AUD 1.766918
AWG 2.119692
AZN 1.994688
BAM 1.95898
BBD 2.370948
BDT 143.291362
BGN 1.957971
BHD 0.443938
BIF 3468.050837
BMD 1.177606
BND 1.508649
BOB 8.152232
BRL 6.261344
BSD 1.177211
BTN 103.750399
BWP 16.629992
BYN 3.98607
BYR 23081.085365
BZD 2.367543
CAD 1.621717
CDF 3365.598919
CHF 0.934855
CLF 0.028564
CLP 1120.574751
CNY 8.38335
CNH 8.380094
COP 4602.168229
CRC 592.962449
CUC 1.177606
CUP 31.206569
CVE 110.959935
CZK 24.308161
DJF 209.283864
DKK 7.464058
DOP 74.13038
DZD 152.646476
EGP 56.722067
ERN 17.664096
ETB 169.42569
FJD 2.633952
FKP 0.869053
GBP 0.865129
GEL 3.177563
GGP 0.869053
GHS 14.402216
GIP 0.869053
GMD 83.014763
GNF 10198.071638
GTQ 9.023646
GYD 246.289758
HKD 9.159652
HNL 30.806017
HRK 7.533382
HTG 154.040025
HUF 389.440908
IDR 19263.226548
ILS 3.945617
IMP 0.869053
INR 103.765984
IQD 1542.664379
IRR 49518.348669
ISK 143.20842
JEP 0.869053
JMD 189.066878
JOD 0.834869
JPY 173.290084
KES 152.500294
KGS 102.981499
KHR 4718.668648
KMF 492.832729
KPW 1059.85009
KRW 1628.830203
KWD 0.359441
KYD 0.980992
KZT 636.202633
LAK 25518.730354
LBP 105454.652592
LKR 355.577144
LRD 209.820032
LSL 20.430901
LTL 3.477165
LVL 0.712322
LYD 6.353193
MAD 10.573433
MDL 19.582785
MGA 5269.788444
MKD 61.58868
MMK 2472.523703
MNT 4233.279059
MOP 9.43221
MRU 47.016005
MUR 53.569018
MVR 18.020399
MWK 2045.502564
MXN 21.617673
MYR 4.953602
MZN 75.2502
NAD 20.443493
NGN 1765.471777
NIO 43.229898
NOK 11.571503
NPR 166.000439
NZD 1.975376
OMR 0.452768
PAB 1.177211
PEN 4.112792
PGK 4.91828
PHP 67.217686
PKR 331.437452
PLN 4.247096
PYG 8404.64174
QAR 4.28737
RON 5.062771
RSD 117.174178
RUB 97.743066
RWF 1702.818849
SAR 4.417149
SBD 9.67641
SCR 16.819742
SDG 708.330323
SEK 10.921133
SGD 1.506912
SHP 0.925414
SLE 27.467673
SLL 24693.82164
SOS 672.997076
SRD 46.092103
STD 24374.074823
STN 24.965256
SVC 10.300632
SYP 15311.007937
SZL 20.431618
THB 37.417855
TJS 11.130366
TMT 4.121622
TND 3.411501
TOP 2.758071
TRY 48.656806
TTD 7.989969
TWD 35.429427
TZS 2909.51447
UAH 48.503315
UGX 4125.696499
USD 1.177606
UYU 47.246285
UZS 14578.767173
VES 188.708334
VND 31069.378353
VUV 140.81119
WST 3.236007
XAF 657.023428
XAG 0.027748
XAU 0.00032
XCD 3.18254
XCG 2.121644
XDR 0.818784
XOF 656.516976
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.150907
ZAR 20.443598
ZMK 10599.871092
ZMW 27.811141
ZWL 379.188779
  • RBGPF

    -1.2700

    76

    -1.67%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    24.45

    +0.2%

  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    15.64

    +1.41%

  • NGG

    0.0200

    71.62

    +0.03%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    24.32

    -0.16%

  • RELX

    0.3600

    46.86

    +0.77%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    40.3

    -1.32%

  • SCS

    0.0600

    16.87

    +0.36%

  • RIO

    1.2800

    63.72

    +2.01%

  • AZN

    -1.5100

    78.05

    -1.93%

  • BTI

    -0.5600

    56.03

    -1%

  • BCC

    -0.5600

    85.12

    -0.66%

  • JRI

    -0.0365

    14.06

    -0.26%

  • VOD

    -0.0400

    11.81

    -0.34%

  • BCE

    -0.4700

    23.69

    -1.98%

  • BP

    0.3200

    34.21

    +0.94%

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.Havel--TPP