BERLIN (Reuters) – German prosecutors charged three people on Tuesday over an explosion at a chemicals park in western Germany in which seven people died, accusing them of killing and causing an explosion by recklessness.
In a statement, Cologne prosecutors said they suspected the three of having allowed chemicals in the tank that exploded in late July to be stored at temperatures higher than permitted, allowing a chain reaction to take place.
Prosecutors did not identify the suspects.
The explosion, at the Chempark, used by chemicals firms including Bayer AG and Lanxess AG, sent a pall of smoke over the western city of Leverkusen. It took firefighters over three hours to extinguish the blaze.
Police had searched the premises of Currenta, the firm operating the unit that exploded, prosecutors said. The suspects voluntarily provided the material requested by the police, which included storage devices, mobile phones and physical documents.
The three were accused of neglecting their duty of taking appropriate care when storing and treating the waste chemicals that exploded.
(Reporting by Thomas Escritt in Berlin; Editing by Matthew Lewis)