Fires swept through two factories in
The death
toll from the late Tuesday fires is likely to raise fresh questions about
industrial safety in the nuclear-armed South Asian nation and draw more
criticism of the deeply unpopular government. In the deadliest incident, flames
raced through a garment factory in the teeming commercial capital of Karachi , killing at least
100 people.
"People
started screaming for their lives," said Mohammad Asif, 20. "Everyone
came to the window. I jumped from the third floor." In Lahore , a fire raged in a shoe factory,
killing at least 25 people. Critics say Pakistan 's government is too
corrupt and ineffective to focus on the welfare of workers and a dizzying array
of other problems, from crippling power cuts, to widespread poverty to a
Taliban insurgency.
"The
owners were more concerned with safeguarding the garments in the factory than
the workers," said garment factory employee Mohammad Pervez, holding up a
photograph of his cousin, one of the workers who is still missing. "If
there were no metal grills on the windows a lot of people would have been save.
The factory was overflowing with garments and fabrics.
Whoever
complained was fired." At a Karachi
hospital, about 30 bodies burned beyond recognition were lined up at a morgue.
"There is no space left here. It's full," said ambulance worker Wasif
Ali. "They keep coming."
Senior
Superintendent of Police Amir Farooqi told Reuters that police were raiding
parts of Karachi
to search for the factory owners. Farooqi said 35 people were injured in the
garment factory fire and bodies were still being recovered from the facility
which employed about 450 people. The latest death toll in Karachi was more than 100 people, said
Farooqi.
Smoke was
still rising from the factory as rescue workers pulled out charred corpses and
covered them in white sheets. Relatives of workers stood around in the street
awaiting word of their fate. Several wept. The cause of the garment factory
fire was not clear. "Within two minutes there was fire in the entire
factory," said factory worker Liaqat Hussain, 29, from his hospital bed
where he was being treated for burns all over his body. "The gate was
closed.
There was
no access to get out, we were trapped inside." In Lahore , workers at the shoe factory suspected
that the fire was caused by a problem with a generator. "We saw our
colleagues burning alive, in flames," said Shabdir Hussain, from his
hospital bed.
"We
could do nothing. We saved our lives by jumping from the roof." Successive
governments have been unable to provide a reliable power supply so factories
have to have their own generators, powered by diesel or petrol, if they want to
avoid regular, lengthy power cuts.
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