PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — The ceiling of a Cambodian factory that
makes Asics sneakers collapsed on workers early Thursday, 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 Phnom Penh, the capital, 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.
At a clinic where she was being treated for her injuries,
worker Kong Thary cried on the telephone as she recounted the collapse.
"We were working normally and suddenly several pieces of brick and iron started falling on us," the 25-year-old said.
An
initial investigation showed the ceiling that collapsed was poorly
built and lacked the proper building materials to support heavy weight,
said Ou Sam Oun, governor of Kampong Speu province, where the factory
was located.
Chea Muny, chief of a trade union for factory
workers, identified the factory as a Taiwanese-owned operation called
Wing Star that produces sneakers for Asics, a Japanese sportswear label.
He said shoes made at the factory were imported to the United States
and Europe.
An Asics spokeswoman in Tokyo confirmed the factory
was in contract to make Asics running shoes. She said Asics was trying
to determine what happened.
"We understand that some people have
died, so first we offer our condolences," said spokeswoman Masayo
Hasegawa in Tokyo. She said she did not have information on the last
time the building structure had been inspected but added, "We want the
highest priority to be placed on saving lives."
The factory
complex, which opened about a year ago, consists of several buildings
and employs about 7,000 people, said Pannara, the police officer. The
structure where the collapse occurred was mainly used as a storage
warehouse for shoe-production equipment but had a small work area for
about two dozen people, Chea Muny said.
The garment industry is
Cambodia's biggest export earner, employing about 500,000 people in more
than 500 garment and shoe factories. In 2012, the southeast Asian
country shipped more than $4 billion worth of products to the United
States and Europe.
The accident comes about three weeks after a
building collapse in Bangladesh killed 1,127 people in the global
garment industry's deadliest disaster.
Source usatoday.com
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