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South Africa: Eleven die in factory fire
By Barbara Slaughter
23 November 2000
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Eleven workers were burnt to death last Friday night in a factory
fire in South Africa. The blaze was at the ESS chemicals factory
in Lenasia, a suburb of Johannesburg. The whole of the nightshiftten
women workers and one male supervisorwere trapped inside
the building with no means of escape. Officials on the scene said
some of the bodies had become stuck in melted plastic from large
tanks holding chemicals. One woman appeared to have suffocated
and others probably died under piles of brick and debris left
by the explosion of gas bottles inside the factory.
The factory owner, Solly Lachporia, had locked all the doors
and gates from the outside, which was confirmed by Billy Nomqca,
who sells fruit at the factory entrance. He told the Sunday
Times, "It was something-to-six when I saw the factory
owner lock the side door before driving away," adding, "Since
I started selling fruit here six months ago the workers have always
been locked in".
The trapped workers could not even telephone for help because
the phone was locked in a burglarproof office. When the blaze
started they rushed to the back of the factory and tried to break
open a padlocked door. A police spokesman said passers-by tried
to rescue the workers, but could not reach them. "Witnesses
are saying they came from a nightclub that is near here and that
they could hear the people screaming, but they could not get in
because the gates and the doors were locked," he said.
John Phongwayao, a security guard at the nightclub, watched
helplessly as a woman trapped inside cried for assistance. He
told the Sunday Times, "I saw one woman holding onto
the mesh gate and she was crying. I saw other people falling into
the fire. The lady was still crying when the factory exploded
seconds later. Then there was just silence."
Margaret Washington, one of the workers at the factory, was
due on shift on Friday, but stayed at home because of pain from
an old burn wound on her leg. On Saturday morning she stood outside
the factory with stunned dayshift workers and relatives, watching
police and fire officers remove charred bodies from the rubble.
Firemen entered the building through a hole blown in the wallthe
main entrance was still padlocked. The roof caved in during the
blaze and burnt chemicals and plastic containers had formed a
molten mass around the bodies, making the work of removal almost
impossible.
Margaret Washington said that allegations that the nightshift
workers were routinely locked in were true. She said the owner
was afraid workers would steal items from the factory. Lachporia's
brother denied the workers had been locked in. He claimed the
allegations were "totally fabricated".
It has been confirmed that chemicalsincluding highly
inflammable white spiritshad been stored inside the building.
Forensic experts said that according to the law, the chemicals
should have been kept outside. Their preliminary conclusion is
that the fire and subsequent explosion may have started when white
spirits spilled onto the floor near a gas burner, used for heating
chemicals in the production of floor polish.
A Soweto police spokesman said the factory owners could face
charges of culpable homicide or murder. He said the owner had
had a responsibility to provide a fire escape, but the expert
evidence gathered so far indicated that this had not been done.
He has not yet been arrested, but if the forensic guys confirm
what they are saying today he will be. Definitely.''
South Africa's director-general of labour Rams Ramashia visited
the site on Saturday. He claimed to be outraged and dismayed
by what he saw and said he had ordered an investigation that would
be followed by a formal inquiry.
However, the conditions that existed at this factory are not
unique in South Africa. Millions of workers toil under unhealthy
and dangerous conditions for miserable wages. Margaret Washington
told reporters that she earned $23.30 a fortnight, or just over
$10 a week.
Employers blatantly ignore safety regulations and the ANC government
is currently taking action to remove the labour laws brought in
1994, after the end of Apartheid, which afford workers a modicum
of protection.
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