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Jordan dismisses senior port officials following deadly chlorine gas leak

Cabinet finds gross negligence was behind deaths of 13 people following incident at Red Sea port of Aqaba
The deaths and injury of over 300 workers came after a crane loading chlorine containers onto a ship dropped one onto the quay, causing it to explode (AFP)

Jordan's cabinet has dismissed several senior officials at the country's main Red Sea port of Aqaba after finding gross negligence was behind the deaths of 13 people following a chlorine gas leak at a major berth.

The deaths and injury of more than 300 workers came after a crane loading chlorine containers onto a ship last Monday dropped one onto the quay, causing it to explode.

The cabinet took the decision to fire the director-general of state-owned Aqaba Company for Ports Operation & Management and other port officials on Sunday after an investigation showed "negligence and major deficiencies" in safety protocols, Prime Minister Bisher al-Khasawneh said in a Twitter post.

At a news conference on Sunday, Interior Minister Mazin al-Farrayeh said the results of the investigation, which began shortly after the incident and includes the testimony of more than 120 people, would be handed over to the public prosecutor.

"The necessary measures for general safety in handling such dangerous hazardous materials were not taken," Farrayeh said, adding he expected those responsible to be put on trial.

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Earlier the port came to a near standstill after hundreds of workers stayed at home to demand better industrial safety measures.

Unions said the latest cabinet steps met some of their demands, but that no final decision had been taken to call off further protests, part of a string of demonstrations since the incident that included sit-ins in front of government offices.

"We are committed to the stoppage until our demands to provide the right industrial safety environment (are met)," said Ahmad Amayra, a leading unionist who said hundreds of workers had stayed away from work at the main port facilities.

Industry experts said the incident could have turned into a catastrophe had dozens of workers ending a shift not left the site shortly before the leak. 

Winds also blew the toxic gas away from populated areas in the port city to the outlying desert, Reuters reported.

The leak is the second major scandal to have hit Khasawneh's government in recent years after at least seven patients died last year when oxygen ran out at a public hospital.

Aqaba port at the north end of the Red Sea has long been a major transit route for Iraqi cargo, but has also become a gateway for some goods destined to Syria and the occupied Palestinian territories.

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