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H&M Bangladesh deaths under scrutiny

A fire at a H&M factory in Bangladesh last week was not the first to have broken out at the site and the company is investigating allegations that 21 workers who died in the blaze were locked in at the time.

H&M Bangladesh deaths under scrutiny

“There was a smaller fire there in 2008, but no one was injured then,” H&M spokesperson, Jenni Tapper Hoël told news agency TT.

“Personnel from our local office are on the way there now to find out what happened,” she said, adding that it was too early to comment on speculation that a lack of safety provisions at the factory was responsible for the deaths.

When the fire broke out on Thursday at the plant in Gazipur, north of the country’s capital, Dhaka, 21 workers were trapped in an upper floor which survivors say was locked, reports TT. At least 40 workers were injured.

The factory which makes knitted sweaters for H&M was previously checked by the company in October 2009 and no major safety shortfalls were found, said Tapper Hoël .

Viveka Risberg, head of Swedwatch, a state funded organization monitoring Swedish companies in developing countries said that it was not the first time workers have died in fires at H&M factories in Bangladesh.

“I know that another factory, that also works for H&M, burned during the last decade and that people died,” she told TT.

Risberg, who previously worked for the company and visited the factory in Gazipur, said that workers had been locked in there before.

“I know that it occurred ten years ago, but I thought that it was a thing of the past.”

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FIRE

Situation ‘unstable’ at Copenhagen’s old stock exchange after fire

Three days after a fire which ravaged Copenhagen's historic former stock exchange broke out, emergency services said Friday that the situation was "unstable" due to equipment issues and a strong breeze.

Situation 'unstable' at Copenhagen's old stock exchange after fire

In the morning, during work to dismantle the scaffolding surrounding the building, a crane’s cutters came loose for as of yet unknown reasons.

It is currently wedged between the scaffolding — put up for the renovation of the historic building that was ongoing — and what remains of the walls.

“It is affecting our efforts”, Tim Ole Simonsen, leader of the operation at the rescue services, told a press conference.

Coupled with the wind picking up, the incident, which has temporarily halted work on dismantling the scaffolding, has made the situation “unstable”.

“The wind is blowing harder and harder, and there are tarps over the scaffolding that can catch the wind,” Simonsen said.

He added that this increases the risks, in particular of further collapse of the burnt-out facade which started collapsing late Thursday afternoon.

Located close to the Christiansborg parliament and seat of government, the Borsen building was commissioned by King Christian IV and built between 1619 and 1640. It was the stock exchange until the 1970s.

The fire began Tuesday morning under the copper roof of the building, which was undergoing renovations ahead of its 400th anniversary.

The cause of the blaze was unknown and Copenhagen police said Wednesday that a major investigation had been launched.

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