Thursday, February 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Loblaws Off The Hook For Rana Plaza Disaster; Bangladeshi Lawsuit Fails

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Aug, 2019 07:12 PM

    TORONTO - One of the country's largest retailers is finally off the hook for the devastating collapse of a garment factory in Bangladesh six years ago.

     

    In a decision on Thursday, the Supreme Court of Canada refused to hear a group of Bangladeshi victims and relatives who wanted to sue Loblaws over the tragedy.

     

    The key issue in the lawsuit was whether a Canadian court had jurisdiction to consider the claim — of importance to companies that source product from abroad.

     

    Both Ontario's Superior Court and Court of Appeal had previously denied the plaintiffs class-action certification in their quest for $2 billion in compensation.

     

    The case arose out of the collapse of the nine-storey Rana Plaza on April 24, 2013, in the Bangladeshi capital of Dhaka.

     

    In all, 1,130 people were killed and 2,520 others seriously injured. Two of the clothing-manufacturing companies caught up in the collapse were Pearl Global and New Wave, which was under contract to supply Loblaws with apparel for its Joe Fresh brand.

     

    Two years after the tragedy, Arati Rani Das, who lost a limb and whose mother was killed in the collapse, and three other Bangladeshi citizens launched a proposed class action in Ontario against Loblaws and three affiliates.

     

    In their statement of claim, the plaintiffs argued Loblaws was responsible for worker safety. They alleged the company knew workplaces in Bangladesh were dangerous, and had undertaken to ensure the buildings in which Joe Fresh garments were made were safe.

     

    Superior Court Justice Paul Perell decided in July 2017 that Bangladesh's laws applied. As such, he concluded the claim had been filed too late, and that Loblaws owed no "duty of care" to the proposed class members.

     

    "The imposition of liability (on Loblaws) is unfair given that the defendants are not responsible for the vulnerability of the plaintiffs, did not create the dangerous workplace, had no control over the circumstances that were dangerous, and had no control over the employers or employees or other occupants of Rana Plaza," Perell said.

     

    On appeal, Ontario's top court agreed.

     

    In its decision in December, the Court of Appeal ruled the deaths and injuries formed the basis of the claim, and those occurred in Dhaka.

     

    The court found that Loblaws had little control over the factories and had never promised to audit Rana Plaza for structural safety. As a result, the court decided, the governing law was that of Bangladesh. The court also found the claim had been filed too late.

     

    "It is plain and obvious that a claim based on vicarious liability against Loblaws cannot succeed under the law of Bangladesh," the Appeal Court said.

     

    The Appeal Court also ordered the plaintiffs to pay Loblaws almost $1 million in legal costs — a decision the Supreme Court also left undisturbed.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Chilliwack Man Charged With Sex Assault, Child Pornography Offences

    Police Say Robert Wayne Calvert Has Been Charged With A Dozen Sex Offences, Including Sexual Assault And Child Pornography, And Investigators Are Asking The Public To Come Forward If They Have More Information.  

    Chilliwack Man Charged With Sex Assault, Child Pornography Offences

    Do You Recognize This Man? Vancouver Police Release Photos Of 2018 Violent Home Invasion Suspect

    Vancouver Police have released security photos of a suspect involved in a 2018 home invasion, hoping to identify the man.

    Do You Recognize This Man? Vancouver Police Release Photos Of 2018 Violent Home Invasion Suspect

    MEA on Sikhs For Justice Ban: India Takes No Cognisance of What Fringe Elements Have to Say

    MEA on Sikhs For Justice Ban: India Takes No Cognisance of What Fringe Elements Have to Say
    US-based The Sikhs for Justice, a pro -Khalistan group which pushes for Sikh Referendum 2020 as part of its separatist agenda, was on Wednesday banned by the government for its alleged anti-national activities.

    MEA on Sikhs For Justice Ban: India Takes No Cognisance of What Fringe Elements Have to Say

    Thief Notes PIN Number, Then Steals Credit Card From Senior In Delta

    Thief Notes PIN Number, Then Steals Credit Card From Senior In Delta
    Delta Police are cautioning the public to be sure to take precautions when entering their bank and credit card PIN numbers while out shopping.

    Thief Notes PIN Number, Then Steals Credit Card From Senior In Delta

    Driver In Fatal Coquitlam Tesla Crash Was Impaired, Driving 150 Km/h In A 60 Zone, Mounties Say

    A Coquitlam RCMP investigation has found that impairment and speed, not mechanical or computer failure, were the decisive factors in a fatal, single-vehicle crash earlier this year involving a Tesla.

    Driver In Fatal Coquitlam Tesla Crash Was Impaired, Driving 150 Km/h In A 60 Zone, Mounties Say

    Police Recover $300,000 In Stolen Goods From Abbotsford Property

    Police Recover $300,000 In Stolen Goods From Abbotsford Property
    On July 8, 2019, Abbotsford Police patrol officers observed a stolen flat deck truck transporting an excavator onto a residential property in the 1200 blk of Columbia Road.    

    Police Recover $300,000 In Stolen Goods From Abbotsford Property