Singapore's Jurong Shipyard has been fined again over safety failings that led to a fatal accident.

The yard will pay SGD 230,000 ($117,500) after an incident in 2015 when a worker became caught between a gantry crane and a manifold, local media said.

Jurong failed to take measures to ensure the safety of workers, the Ministry of Manpower (MOM) said.

Stephen Yeo Chye Mong was a safety coordinator and patrol man employed by subcontractor Foo Ngan Marine.

On 20 March, he was making safety checks near manifolds along the track of an operational gantry crane.

A colleague later found him lying on the ground between a water supply manifold and the crane track.

MOM found systemic failures in the way the yard performed lifting operations, it was reported.

These included failing to appoint a banksman to ensure that nobody was in the travelling path of the crane.

The fine is its third in recent months.

In January, it had to pay SGD 230,000 after two workers fell 30m from a cherry picker and died.

In November 2017, it was fined SGD 400,000 over a 2012 incident in which an oil rig tilted, injuring 89 people.