Six managers of the German steelmaker are accused of being responsible for the deaths of seven workers who suffered severe burns when a fire broke out at the plant's thermal treatment department in early December last year.
The fire was one of the worst in recent years in Italy and sparked a public debate over health and safety regulations as most of the workers died of their injuries over the following days and weeks.
The company's General Director Harald Espenhahn will stand trial for "voluntary homicide." The decision sets a precedent in Italy as it is the first time that workplace deaths have brought such a charge, accoding to ANSA.
The accident cast the spotlight on the high number of workplace-related deaths in Italy. Figures are declining however, with 1,302 deaths in 2006 compared to 1,400 in 2002.
The ThyssenKrupp trial will open on Jan. 15.
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(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 17, 2008 17:12 ET (22:12 GMT)
Publié le 17 novembre 2008 Copyright © 2008 Dowjones





