• Contact
  • Subscribe
  • All News
  • Response Materials
    • Austria
    • Bulgaria
    • Czech Republic and Slovakia
    • France - Belgium - Luxemburg
    • Germany
    • Italy
    • Portugal
    • Romania
    • Spain
    • Switzerland (French)
    • Switzerland (German)
  • ANN News

This is an official website of the Seventh-day Adventist Church Inter-European Division.

  • Facebook
  • X
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
  • Email
  • Imprint
  • Privacy
© 2026 Inter-European Division of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
Schosshaldenstr. 17, 3006 Bern, Switzerland +41 31 359 15 15
  • All News
  • Response Materials
  • Regional News
  • ANN News
  • Contact
  • Subscribe
Seventh Day Adventist Logo

This is an official website of the Seventh-day Adventist Church Inter-European Division.

Learn more

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
  • E-Mail

Adventists part of response in Bangladesh factory collapse disaster

Savar, Bangladesh [Benjamin Raksham/BAUM/ANN]. Seventh-day Adventists were some of the first responders to a commercial factory building collapse in Savar, Bangladesh, that has captured international media attention and sparked debate over building standa

May 2, 2013
Benjamin Raksham/BAUM/ANN;
Bangladesh333

Bangladesh333

Savar, Bangladesh [Benjamin Raksham/BAUM/ANN]. Seventh-day Adventists were some of the first responders to a commercial factory building collapse in Savar, Bangladesh, that has captured international media attention and sparked debate over building standards.

Ten Adventist youth trained in earthquake preparedness and potential building collapse situations were some of the first onsite after the Wednesday, April 24 collapse and helped bring out 30 victims, four of whom were still alive.

Another group of 125 Adventist young people went to the disaster site on Saturday, April 27 to assist rescue teams. The group helped recover three women as well as several bodies. They also provided food and water to survivors.

The eight-story commercial building is known as Rana Plaza and is located approximately 45 kilometers from the capital city of Dhaka.

The building housed five garment factories, production lines, banks and hundreds of shops. An estimated 3,500 people were in the building at the time of the collapse, the majority of whom were female factory workers under the age of 25. To date, approximately 400 bodies have been recovered and 2,444 injured people have been rescued, but hundreds are still unaccounted for.

ADRA Bangladesh also responded promptly by providing oxygen tanks, masks, flashlights, hammers, shovels and other tools as preliminary assistance. According to director Serpa Santana Landerson, ADRA Bangladesh is planning to donate cash to the Prime Minister’s Relief Fund after committee approval is received.

During an April 26 Adventist Youth evening meeting, young people spontaneously collected Taka 12,100 (approximately USD$160) for the victims.

Reports have confirmed that at least one Adventist, a boy named Bitu Baroi, who was working in one of the garment factories, is still missing. His mother works at Pollywog, an Adventist-sponsored handicraft industry located on the Adventist Church’s Bangladesh Adventist Union Mission campus. The disaster area is about 20 kilometers from the union office.

The garment industry is a major foreign currency earner in Bangladesh and the biggest industry in the country. Bangladesh is the second largest garment exporter country in the world after China. There are more than 5,000 such factories in Bangladesh, mainly in Dhaka and Chittagong regions. And that number only counts factories registered with the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporting Association. There are hundreds more not under this umbrella. There are about six million factory workers, mostly women, employed directly in this industry.

To learn more about this issue, please visit the web page: http://www.adrabangladesh.org/

pictures: 1. Rescuers work on Saturday, April 27 to recover survivors of the factory collapse in Savar, Bangladesh. Adventist workers wore orange uniforms [photos by Flabian Shaikat Sikder] 2. Adventist Church member Thais Landerson is interviewed on site of the factory collapse. She is the daughter of Serpa Santana Landerson, who serves as country director for the Adventist Development and Relief Agency for Bangladesh. (ANN)

Related articles

ADRA Portimão Inaugurates New Social Store in City Center

ADRA Portimão Inaugurates New Social Store in City Center

2026-05-21T08:18:35.980Z

Nationwide Charity Race Raises Crucial Funds for Domestic Violence Survivors

Nationwide Charity Race Raises Crucial Funds for Domestic Violence Survivors

2026-05-20T07:43:23.538Z

Bulgarian Union Constituency Meeting 2026 Focuses on the Mission, Unity and Future Development

Bulgarian Union Constituency Meeting 2026 Focuses on the Mission, Unity and Future Development

2026-05-19T15:37:03.931Z

Germany: Joint Camporee of Adventist Pathfinders in the Coastal Federal States

Germany: Joint Camporee of Adventist Pathfinders in the Coastal Federal States

2026-05-18T21:11:20.013Z

Subscribe for our weekly newsletter