NEW DELHI: Features NDTV researches condition of laborers' security in development area Finds a few cases where little changes even after passings of laborers Foundational absence of responsibility and habitual pettiness keeps specialists perilous In Navi Mumbai, satellite city to India's business capital, Sai Mannat, a skyscraper loft complex is coming to fruition. Worked by the Paradise Group, it offers more than 300 pads beginning at Rs. 1.5 crore. Luxuries incorporate a clubhouse with an exercise room, badminton and squash court, spa and swimming pools. The sparkle hides a dull section. On May 22, two laborers, Rehmetullah Sheik and Aitbari Ansari tumbled to their demise. They were a piece of a gathering of three, suspended on a metallic board on the seventeenth floor amid mortar work of a working all things considered. The rope of the metallic board snapped. One laborer hung to the rope and was spared however the other two kicked the bucket on the spot. Today, in spite of the passings, the hazard to laborers continues. We recorded inside the Sai Mannat site utilizing a shrouded camera - and a consistent camera from the outside - to discover specialists suspended a few stories over the ground without security nets or belts. We could see open wires, representing the danger of electric shock. A metallic board, a similar one which caused the lethal mishap in May, could be seen sliding down the building, tilted, with three specialists on it without protective caps. These discoveries shed light on the darker side of India's $140 billion development industry, where an inescapable absence of security, and in addition absence of government oversight places a great many laborers at grave hazard. The Building and Other Construction Workers Act, 1996, which represents wellbeing at worskites, sets out almost 200 standards, including requesting that businesses guarantee that laborers are provided with protective caps, boots, bridles and other security gear. Hazardous open spaces are intended to be secured, with mesh, for example. Uncovered wiring in wet regions is another no-no under the law. On account of the Sai Mannat mischance, the specialists could have been secured had they been bridled to a strong piece of the structure. Additionally, the stage should have been tried for its heap bearing limit, say specialists. Developers, in any case, have little weight to take after these standards, given the horrifying absence of government oversight. The temporary worker, Prakash Kadam told NDTV, "The wire snapped. He (the specialist who kicked the bucket in the mischance) was wearing a seat strap yet it wasn't associated with where it should be associated."