CATEGORIES

Share on:

Fight on Tower Crane Results in Death

WRITTEN BY

Al-Musaffah-crane-accident-abu-dhabiAn engineer was killed after an argument with a tower crane operator while 40 meters in the air, according to a report in the Gulf News.

The 39-year-old employee climbed up the device to discipline the driver, who had told him that a request he made was “crazy”.

Colonel Maktoum Al Sharifi, director of the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) at Abu Dhabi Police, said the Arab victim was working for a construction company in Al Musaffah.

“As the victim reached the crane operator’s cab, the operator struck him on the head with a metal object, sending him plunging to the ground,” Colonel Al Sharifi said to the paper.

The CID received a report that the man had fallen from the crane because he lost his balance.

However, upon investigation the CID found that an argument had taken place between the 33-year-old Asian crane operator and … [the victim].”

After the argument the victim was enraged and insisted that the crane operator be disciplined for calling him crazy.

The crane operator reportedly confessed that he hit the engineer with a one-kilogramme metal object, claiming that he was trying to defend himself. He has been arrested.

In the report, Colonel Al Sharifi urged members of the public to show self-restraint and resort to reason as losing self-control can lead to jail and death.

by Greg Whitaker
View full article here
RELATED blogs

Tower Crane Binder Expectations and Site Binder Templates

  A ­cr­an­e ­bi­nd­er­ i­s ­a ­st­ru­ct­ur­ed­ c­ol­le­ct­io­n ­of­ a­ll­ s­af­et­y,­ o­pe­ra­ti­on­al­, ­an­d ­co­mp­li­an­ce­ d­oc­um­en­ts­ r­el­at­ed­ t­o ­a ­sp­ec­if­ic­ t­ow­er­

Safe Work Practices and SWP checklists (tower/self-erecting cranes)

Sa­fe Wo­rk Pr­ac­ti­ce­s, or SW­Ps, de­sc­ri­be th­e ag­ree­d up­on st­ep­s cr­ew­s fo­ll­ow wh­en th­ey op­er­at­e, in­sp­ec­t, or ma­in­ta­in a to­we­r

Crane Attachments: A Guide to Improving Lift Material Handling

Cr­an­e a­tt­ac­hm­en­ts p­la­y a­ k­ey r­ol­e i­n i­mp­ro­vi­ng h­ow m­at­er­ia­ls a­re h­an­dle­d o­n c­on­st­ru­ct­io­n s­it­es a­nd i­nd­us­tr­ia­l p­ro­je­ct­s. T­he r­ig­ht