Steel firm boss convicted on deaths
A top executive at a German steelmaker has been convicted of murder for a 2007 plant blaze that killed seven workers in Italy.
The court in Turin sentenced ThyssenKruppâs CEO for Italy, Harald Espenhahn, to 16 and a half years in prison, as had been requested by the prosecutors, ANSA and LaPresse news agencies said.
Five other company officials were convicted on manslaughter charges and sentenced to up to 13-and-a-half years in prison, according to the reports.
The trial has been hailed as historic because it was the first time that workplace deaths in Italy had led to murder charges and, now, a conviction.
Relatives of the victims, some wearing T-shirts featuring photographs of the victims, applauded after the verdict was read in a Turin courtroom. Some cried, others hugged and thanked the leading prosecutor, Raffaele Guariniello.
âI believe this conviction can mean a lot for the safety of workplaces,â Mr Guariniello said, calling the ruling âepoch-makingâ.
The verdict, reached after several hours of deliberations, can be challenged.
ThyssenKrupp called it âincomprehensible and unexplainableâ in a statement carried by ANSA. It expressed its pain for the workersâ deaths, and said that âa similar tragedy must never repeat itselfâ.
One worker died immediately in the blaze at the steelmakerâs plant in Turin, while the other six died later in hospital. The deaths prompted calls in Italy for improved safety measures in the workplace. ThyssenKrupp said after the blaze that there was no confirmation that any safety violations had played a role in the fire.
Labour minister Maurizio Sacconi said the verdict set a ârelevant precedentâ.
Giorgio Airaudo, of the metalworkersâ union Fiom, welcomed the ruling, saying: âWhen workers are injured or killed at the workplace itâs never by chance, itâs always somebodyâs responsibility.â





