Court bails Pakistan fire factory owners

Court bails Pakistan fire factory owners
Updated 15 September 2012
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Court bails Pakistan fire factory owners

Court bails Pakistan fire factory owners

KARACHI: Three factory-owners facing murder charges over the deaths of 289 people in a huge fire in Karachi handed themselves in to court on Friday to request pre-arrest bail, their lawyer said.
Workers burned to death or suffocated in the massive blaze that engulfed Ali Enterprises clothing factory, which made ready-to-wear clothes for export to Western retailers, on Tuesday evening.
Police registered a murder case over the fire on Thursday, saying the owners — Abdul Aziz, Mohammad Arshad and Shahid Bhaila — had shown “utter negligence” about workers’ safety. The trio, who have not been arrested, appeared in the high court in Larkana, 450 kilometers (300 miles) north of Karachi and were granted “protective bail” for eight days, their lawyer Aamir Mansoor Qureshi told AFP.
He said they went to the Larkana court as they feared for their lives in Karachi, the metropolis of 18 million people which came to a standstill on Thursday as a mark of respect for the victims of Pakistan’s worst ever industrial fire.
“We prayed to Justice Hasan Azhar Rizvi that we are willing to proceed through the legal course, and without a protective bail security repercussions were there,” Qureshi said.
A court official confirmed the ruling, which means the trio cannot be arrested before Sept. 22, and said the judge had ordered them to appear in court in Karachi before the bail expired.
“The court also directed the immigration officials to ensure they do not leave the country,” the official added. The industries minister for Sindh, the province of which Karachi is capital, submitted his resignation on Friday to avoid any suggestion of interference in the investigation.
“I have resigned from the post of the provincial minister for industries so that inquiries into the incident of fire in a garment factory remain impartial, could not be influenced upon and prove fruitful,” Rauf Siddiqui said.

Up to 600 people were working in the building, which officials said was in poor condition without emergency exits, forcing dozens to jump from upper storys to escape the flames. Others were trapped in the basement, where they perished.
The case has highlighted Pakistan’s dismal industrial safety standards, with badly-paid workers given little equipment to protect them from hazardous conditions.