Work place safety: No lessons learnt
The Nov 4 collapse of the polythene factory in Lahore’s Sundar Industrial Estate, that killed over 45 (including the factory owner and his son) and injuring over a hundred, has raised several uneasy questions not just about the workplace safety standards in the industrial sector but corruption that goes on unchecked in the government which leads to flouting of labour rights and laws as well as building codes.
Thirty-two-year-old Mohammad Javed passes by what is left of the garment factory every day where he worked till a month back and from under which his older brother Mohammad Iqbal’s body was found three days later.
And every time he passes by the factory rubble, memories of all that went inside the building begin to haunt him including the “measly salary which was never given on time, the continued sexual exploitation of the few women who worked, and sexual abuse of underage children employed there.”
As long as rules continue to be flouted accidents will happen again and again
“It’s not a country for the poor,” he said seething with rage. For now the future looks bleak. The fact that he now has to fend for a family of eight which includes his brother’s family of three, two unmarried sisters, his own wife and a son and an elderly father is weighing him down. He blames the factory owner for his family’s misfortune.
But for Fahim Zaman, former head of the Karachi Building and Construction Authority (KBCA), the buck does not stop with the owner who was building an additional storey and for which he was granted approval by the industrial estate.
He said many heads should roll. “God knows we have enough laws; the concerned person who is supposed to apply the law but didn’t should be held responsible,” he said and added, “Till the laws continue to be flouted and are not implemented fully, such tragedies will also continue.”