Thailand orders construction halt for firm Italian-Thai after fatal accidents - GEAR MAG

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Friday, January 16, 2026

Thailand orders construction halt for firm Italian-Thai after fatal accidents

Thailand orders construction halt for firm Italian-Thai after fatal accidents

BANGKOK, Jan 16 (Reuters) - Thailand's Transport Ministry said on Friday that it had ordered a 15-day construction halt on 14 ​contracts involving Italian-Thai Development PCL as well as other ‌large-scale projects overseen by the ministry, as it conducts safety inspections after two fatal ‌accidents this week.

The decision follows a train derailing that killed 32 passengers in northeastern Nakhon Ratchasima on Wednesday and the death of two drivers when their vehicles were crushed near Bangkok a day later, with ⁠both incidents caused by ‌the collapse of cranes used on projects involving Italian-Thai Development .

The firm has said it would compensate those affected.

Chirapong ‍Theppithuck, deputy permanent secretary of the Transport Ministry, said the halt to Italian-Thai's projects would allow expert teams to conduct detailed inspections to ensure safety standards ​were being met.

He also ordered other major construction projects commissioned ‌by the Transport Ministry to halt construction for up to 15 days for similar inspections, according to a statement.

The results would be reported to the ministry and legal and regulatory action would be taken if required, it said.

This week's crane collapses were the latest in ⁠a series of fatal accidents at construction projects in ​Thailand, several involving Italian-Thai, including the fall ​of a partially-built Bangkok tower last year following a 7.7-magnitude earthquake in neighbouring Myanmar, which killed at least 89 ‍and led to charges ⁠of negligence against 23 people.

Thailand, Southeast Asia's second-biggest economy, is in the middle of a massive infrastructure boom, building highways ⁠and high-speed rail lines across the country and expanding its elevated rail network in ‌Bangkok.

(Reporting by Orathai Siriring and Panarat Thepgumpanat; Writing by ‌Martin Petty; Editing by David Stanway)