Two Construction Workers Fall to Their Deaths from 40th Floor of Tel Aviv Building
East Jerusalem residents fall from mechanical platform in Bavli neighborhood; watchdog demands government take action on worker safety.
- By Shereen Hashem
- Feb 14, 2022
Two men fell to their deaths on Wednesday from the 40th floor of an apartment building under construction in Tel Aviv. The two men were named as East Jerusalem residents Ghazi Abu Sbeitan and Ahmad Ziyad al-Sayyad. The two, in their 30s, were working at the site of a luxury apartment complex on Harav Nissim Street in the Bavli neighborhood.
According to an article, the circumstances surrounding the fall were not immediately clear, but it appeared the accident occurred when a mechanical platform on the side of the building collapsed. This was the third time in recent years that construction workers had been killed when mechanical scaffolding platforms collapsed. Two men died at a site in the central city of Rosh Ha’ayin in 2018, and a worker was killed in a similar incident at a site in Tel Aviv last year.
There have been no prosecutions in relation to any of those deaths. Deaths of construction workers in the Middle East are a frequent occurrence, largely because of poorly enforced safety codes. Hadas Tagri, head of the Group Against Construction and Industrial Accidents, said that ministers needed to take action and legislate to ensure worker safety.
“For many months we have been warning the economy minister [Orna Barbivai] and her deputy Yair Golan about the precarious safety situation of the workers, at construction sites and in general, detailing a series of steps that must be taken to promote their safety,” Tagri said.
“We have repeatedly urged the minister for reform to expand responsibility for safety at construction sites, to promote the establishment of a national safety authority, and to present goals and a detailed work plan to promote workers’ safety in 2022, before more workers are harmed,” she added.
According to a tally, seven construction workers have been killed this year in workplace incidents.
About the Author
Shereen Hashem is the Associate Content Editor for Occupational Health & Safety magazine.