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Bangladesh has shut down 18 garment plants in an attempt to prevent a repeat of last month's factory collapse outside Dhaka, where the death toll passed 800 Wednesday, with rescuers pulling dozens more bodies from the rubble. The announcement of the closures came days after Bangladesh agreed with the International Labour Organisation to give safety "the highest consideration" amid government fears that Western garment firms might start sourcing goods from other countries.
"Sixteen factories have been closed down in Dhaka and two in Chittagong," textile minister Abdul Latif Siddique told reporters in the capital, adding that more plants would be shut as part of strict new measures to ensure safety. "We'll ensure ILO standards in terms of compliance," said Siddique, who heads a newly created high-powered panel to inspect the impoverished country's 4,500 garment factories in an effort to avoid fresh disasters.
"We have seen that those who claim to be the best compliant factories in Bangladesh have not fully abided by building regulations." The death toll from Bangladesh's worst industrial disaster hit 803 Wednesday. Brigadier General Siddiqul Alam Sikder told AFP the stench of bodies trapped in the lower floors and under beams indicated the toll would rise as cranes and bulldozers kept clearing debris.
"We're expecting to find some bodies because we still haven't reached the bottom. We've finished around 70 percent of the job," Sikder said. Workers drawn from the army and fire service wore masks to ward off the smell as they continued to pull bodies from the rubble of the nine-storey building in the town of Savar, a suburb of Dhaka.
More than 3,000 garment workers were on shift on April 24 when the nine-storey Rana Plaza complex crumbled as they were turning out clothing for Western retailers such as Britain's Primark and the Spanish label Mango. A total of 2,437 people were earlier rescued from the ruins, authorities say. Efforts to identify bodies were being hampered by their decomposition, officials said, adding that relief workers were taking DNA samples from the victims to match with relatives.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2013

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