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Sunday, 30 June 2013
Did this woman really survive 17 days in the rubble of Bangladesh factory or was her miracle story actually a hoax?
The picture of Reshma Begum being
pulled from the rubble in the aftermath of the collapse of a Bangladesh
clothes factory was a potent symbol of hope seen around the world. The
19-year-old endured 17 days in the wreckage of the eight-storey Rana
Plaza building, where 1,129 people were killed in April in the clothing
industry's worst disaster, before she was dramatically rescued. But
the apparently miraculous rescue was faked by Bangladeshi authorities
as a damage-control exercise to protect the reputation of the nation's
lucrative garments industry, according to a former colleague. The tragedy of losing more than a thousand lives was forgotten by the victory of saving one. The
official story states workers had all but given up hope of finding
anyone alive after 17 days but heard her cries seconds before they were
due to smash the concrete with heavy machinery, which would have brought
the chunks falling down on her. But the unnamed man claims Miss Begum escaped from the third floor with him on the day the building collapsed.
He said: 'We escaped together. We both walked away from the rubble.
'We spent two days in hospital but then she vanished. The next time I saw her was on TV 17 days later. 'They said it was a miracle. But it was a fake.' Anti-government campaigners played his testimony to reporters. He is reported to have gone into hiding over fears of government reprisal. Bangladeshi newspaper Amar Desh claims to have uncovered evidence that cast doubt on the official version of events.
The
pictures of the teenager have come under scrutiny. In her testimony she
claimed to have clawed through dirt and rubble to reach water in the
rucksacks of the dead, but her hands don't appear to have injuries
consistent with such a harrowing physical ordeal. The
paper also states the sari she was wearing was not dirty and her eyes
seemed unaffected by the bright sunlight, despite the fact she was in
darkness for more than two weeks. TV footage shows she was looking inquisitively around her after she was stretchered away People
living near the disaster zone also claim much of the rescue work was
mysteriously done at night, and authorities prevented anyone filming or
photographing the site. Last
week Reshma appeared at a government press conference to celebrate her
new job as an ambassador for a five-star Dhaka hotel, where she is
being paid £600-a-month, nearly four times her salary at the factory. Responding
to questions about whether her ordeal was staged, she said: 'What did
you say? Where I was, you were not there. So you have no idea.'
Officials then banned further questions.
Her family, whose lives have been transformed by the teenager's lucrative new job, denied the allegations. Speaking
from the family's shack in Rani Ganj, a remote village 300 miles north
west of Dhaka, her mother Jobeda said: 'Her escape is the miracle
everyone thinks it is.' 'We have lots of money now Reshma has her new job. We have a good future now,' she added.
When the Rana Plaza factory building crashed down in April, 1,129 people were killed. Many
of those freed are still recovering.Rescuers with no medical training
were forced to perform amputations on the spot to free them without
anaesthetic. Bangladesh's
government and garment manufacturers are campaigning to close dangerous
factories and to make safety a priority for the country's most valuable
export industry. Bangladeshi garment factories are routinely built without consulting engineers. Many are located in commercial or residential buildings not designed to withstand the stress of heavy manufacturing. Some
add illegal extra floors atop support columns too weak to hold them,
according to a survey of scores of factories by an engineering
university that was shown to The Associated Press. A
separate inspection, by the garment industry, of 200 risky factories
found that 10 per cent of them were so dangerous that they were ordered
to shut. The textiles
minister said a third inspection, conducted by the government, could
show that as many as 300 factories were unsafe.
This sounds like just another story.
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