(Bloomberg) -- An explosion at an illegal fireworks factory in Istanbul on Jan. 31 sent bloodied survivors running for safety as bodies littered the street outside.
``One of them had his head smashed; I saw his brain,'' said Mustafa Guvenbag, 32, who works in a nearby sock factory and lives close to the area. ``These people have been making bombs and they are killing us. Someone has to stop them.''
The disaster, which killed 22 people and injured about 100, underscores the dangers of Turkey's unrestrained economic growth. Unlicensed businesses and those that employ unregistered workers account for almost half the country's economy, which expanded an average of 7 percent annually during the past five years, according to government estimates.
After the explosion, district Mayor Murat Aydin promised to do more to regulate businesses that have proliferated with little oversight. In the Davutpasa district, where the accident occurred, an estimated 20,000 factories have sprung up next door to homes and shops.
``We have been conducting very tight and serious inspections on such factories over the last few years, but this accident shows that we need to do more,'' Aydin said.
The destroyed factory was profiting from growing demand for sparklers and skyrockets. Increased incomes have spurred working- class families to set off fireworks at weddings and other celebrations, copying their rich neighbors.
Raining Metal
The disaster was caused by an explosion in a pressure boiler in a denim factory on the second floor of the building, Aydin said. The fire spread to the third and fourth floors, igniting materials used to make fireworks and causing a second, more powerful blast.
Metal and concrete debris rained down on an area 50 yards in diameter, blocking nearby roads and making it difficult for ambulances and aid workers to reach the scene. Most of the people killed were people on the streets outside, or workers in nearby buildings.
The fireworks plant was identified as unlicensed at the end of last year and ordered to submit a permit application, Aydin said. Inspectors who visited the site were told the factory produced plastic toys. The denim plant was also operating illegally and had been shut down by officials four times in the past, according to the mayor.
Municipalities have encouraged entrepreneurs to skirt licensing laws by repeatedly granting amnesties to businesses set up without planning permission and accepting bribes, said Tores Dincoz, a board member at the Chamber of Architects of Turkey.
800 Inspectors
``How did those explosives get there is one question, and how can the mayor claim his officials thought they were making plastic toys is another one,'' Dincoz said. ``If this is the way officials conduct inspections, I can't imagine the state of security in this country.''
Following the deaths, Labor Minister Faruk Celik ordered 800 inspectors to check all businesses in Istanbul to ensure they are being run legally.
Many factories in Davutpasa don't take basic safety precautions such as installing alarms or providing emergency exits and conducting regular machinery inspections, Aydin said. This is particularly dangerous in Davutpasa because a residential area sits about 100 yards away, separated from the plants by a gas station and a soccer field.
At least one-fifth of the area's factories are illegal, with many producing counterfeit money or bootleg raki, the national aniseed-flavored spirit, Referans newspaper reported today, citing municipal officials. More than 20 people died after being poisoned by fake raki in 2005.