KAMPONG SPEU, Cambodia (AFP)— A ceiling collapsed at a shoe factory in
Cambodia on Thursday killing at least two workers, police said, stoking
concerns about industrial safety after last month's disaster in
Bangladesh.
"Two workers -- a man and a woman -- were killed and
six others were injured," Khem Pannara, district police chief for the
area in the southern province of Kampong Speu told AFP, he said, adding
that the area under the collapsed ceiling was a walkway.
"We have almost removed all the debris and I think there are probably no more people under the rubble."
He
said the concrete ceiling, which appeared to be of "poor construction",
had been used to store equipment and materials and could not hold the
weight.
Rescue
workers and soldiers search through a site of the accident in a shoe
factory in the Kong Pisei district of Kampong Speu province, 50 km (30
miles) west of the capital, Phnom Penh, May 16, 2013.
Last month a nine-storey factory complex outside Dhaka
collapsed, killing 1,127 people in one of the world's worst industrial
disasters and prompting pressure on Western retailers that rely on cheap
labour in the region, where safety standards are often substandard.
One worker at the Cambodian factory said police and some staff worked together to clear the debris.
"Every day more than 100 people work under that area, but I don't know how many were working this morning," said Sokny, 29.
"I was so shocked. I am crying. I saw blood in the debris," she told AFP.
Rong
Chhun, president of the Cambodian Confederation of Unions, said the
incident would further stoke fears among the country's workers about
industrial safety.
"Garment factories in Cambodia do not meet
international safety standard because the quality of the buildings are
not ensured and people have been working with a high risk of danger," he
told AFP.
"We are calling for the government and authorities to
re-examine the quality of the factory buildings in order to avoid this
kind of incident in the future. It happened in Bangladesh recently and
now it has happened in Cambodia. We are very worried about the safety of
the workers."
Cambodia earned $4.6 billion from its garment
exports last year but a series of strikes has pointed to festering
discontent over low wages and tough conditions.
Protests by
workers have also turned ugly. Three women, employees of Puma supplier
Kaoway Sports, were wounded when a gunman opened fire on protesters
demanding better working conditions at factories in February last year.
The shooting prompted Puma, Gap and H&M to express their "deep concern" and urged a thorough investigation.
But
discontent lingers on the factory floor where 400,000 people of the
650,000 people employed in the industry work for foreign firms.
The
monthly minimum wage for the hundreds of thousands of workers who make
clothes for firms such as Levi Strauss of the United States and Sweden's
H&M this month rose from $61 to $75, plus $5 for healthcare, after
months of protest.
Following the Bangladesh disaster top retailers this month pledged to make that country's factories safer.
Top
global brands including Benetton, Carrefour and Marks & Spencer
joined clothing giants Inditex of Spain and H&M on Tuesday in
signing on for the deal to improve fire and building safety to avert
future disasters.
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