MISSING WORKERS’ KIN PROTEST: Relatives of the missing garment workers attend a protest in front of the site of a building collapse in Savar, near Dhaka, yesterday. More than 1,100 workers died and nearly 2,500 were rescued after the eight-story Rana Plaza building that housed mostly garment factories collapsed on April 24.
AFP/Dhaka
More than 140 workers, mostly women, at two Bangladeshi garment factories near the capital Dhaka fell ill yesterday after drinking suspected contaminated water in their workplace, police said.
A series of tragedies since last November when a fire killed 111 people in another factory have triggered renewed scrutiny of “made-in-Bangladesh” clothes commonly sold in the West.
Yesterday’s development comes less than two weeks after up to 600 workers at another garment plant were rushed to hospital after falling sick due to contaminated water.
The incidents follow the collapse of a building housing five garment factories in April that killed 1,129 people, highlighting appalling safety conditions in Bangladesh’s 4,500 garment factories.
Police inspector Humayun Kabir said that several garment workers — most of them women — fell sick yesterday at two garment plants at Joydevpur, an industrial town north of Dhaka.
“At least 141 of them were rushed to one hospital. Some others were taken to other hospitals. The factories were closed for the day,” he said.
“Primarily we suspect the water supply of the factories could be contaminated,” he said.
Officials said the workers were engaged in making garments for Western labels but did not immediately identify the brands.
There are no comments.
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