Thursday, August 21, 2014

[Cambodia]Gov't Says Workplace Injuries on the Rise, Reforms Needed

Gov’t Says Workplace Injuries on the Rise, Reforms Needed

BY MECH DARA AND HOLLY ROBERTSON | AUGUST 20, 2014

In the face of an increase in work-related injuries, government officials gathered in Phnom Penh on Tuesday to start work on a new plan to reduce workplace accidents and to reflect on their achievements over the past five years.

Almost 17,000 people were injured at work last year, about 2,600 more than in 2012, according to the National Social Security Fund.

The number, which relies on employers’ report, has also increased fourfold since the government launched its first Occupational Health and Safety Master Plan in 2009.

Despite the rise, officials were told that 80 percent of the plan’s targets had been met.

Leng Tong, director of the Labor Ministry’s occupational health department, said the list of achievements included enacting health and safety legislation, inspecting workplace and running health clinics for garment workers.

“Recently we have created an inter-ministry committee to prevent fainting of workers and another inter-ministry committee to check about safety in the factories,” he said. “If the factory does not reach standards we will set conditions for it to improve, and if it does not we will fine it or shut it down.”

In a presentation at the meeting, the Labor Ministry’s chief of statistics and external relations, Han Nopakun, admitted to some obstacles to protecting workers.

Chief among them, he said, were limited resources for inspections and a lack of laws and regulations in the construction industry.

http://www.cambodiadaily.com/news/govt-says-workplace-injuries-on-the-rise-reforms-needed-66899/

Monday, July 14, 2014

Re: [Anroev: 2101] Hazardous stone crushing: SC takes notice of silicosis deaths in Gujranwala

This is Pakistan's Supreme Court and not Indian

Jagdish


On 14 July 2014 11:06, Mohit Gupta <mohit.gup@gmail.com> wrote:
The Supreme Court has sought a report from all secretaries of labour and
human resource department, Gujranwala commissioner and heads of
environmental protection agencies in this regard within two weeks.

Earlier, two members of Public Lawyers Front (PLF) namely Osama Khawar and
Yahya Farid Khawaja moved the SC under Article 184 (3) of the Constitution,
requesting it to direct the provincial governments to frame rules regulating
occupations involving stone-crushing and the hazardous emission of silica
dust.

The application pointed out that though the deceased labourers made repeated
requests to the factory owners, they were neither provided with any masks to
protect them from silica powder inhalation, nor did the factory owners
install any dust control equipment.

The applicants furnished a list of 18 young labourers, who died in
Gujranwala from silicosis. Among them were nine labourers who were from one
village in Gujranwala. The latest victim of silicosis is Safdar Ali from
Gujranwala who succumbed to the disease three weeks ago. Ali's brother also
died last year from the same disease.

The court was also informed that more than 100 labourers had died from
silicosis in Dera Ghazi Khan and other regions of Punjab in the last few
years - apparently all of them were working in stone crushing factories.

http://tribune.com.pk/story/734988/hazardous-stone-crushing-sc-takes-notice-
of-silicosis-deaths-in-gujranwala/




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Peoples Training And Research Centre
43,Srinathdham Duplex,
Dinesh Mill -Urmi Rd
VADODARA-390007
Gujarat, INDIA
Ph: +91- 0265- 2345576 (R)
M-94264 86855
Website: www.peoplestraining.org

Hazardous stone crushing: SC takes notice of silicosis deaths in Gujranwala

The Supreme Court has sought a report from all secretaries of labour and human resource department, Gujranwala commissioner and heads of environmental protection agencies in this regard within two weeks.

Earlier, two members of Public Lawyers Front (PLF) namely Osama Khawar and Yahya Farid Khawaja moved the SC under Article 184 (3) of the Constitution, requesting it to direct the provincial governments to frame rules regulating occupations involving stone-crushing and the hazardous emission of silica dust.

The application pointed out that though the deceased labourers made repeated requests to the factory owners, they were neither provided with any masks to protect them from silica powder inhalation, nor did the factory owners install any dust control equipment.

The applicants furnished a list of 18 young labourers, who died in Gujranwala from silicosis. Among them were nine labourers who were from one village in Gujranwala. The latest victim of silicosis is Safdar Ali from Gujranwala who succumbed to the disease three weeks ago. Ali’s brother also died last year from the same disease.

The court was also informed that more than 100 labourers had died from silicosis in Dera Ghazi Khan and other regions of Punjab in the last few years – apparently all of them were working in stone crushing factories.

http://tribune.com.pk/story/734988/hazardous-stone-crushing-sc-takes-notice-of-silicosis-deaths-in-gujranwala/

 

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Re: [Anroev: 2091] China sees drop in new pneumoconiosis cases

Thank you Earl for your views. What we all have been doing  here are probably addressing only 1 % of those who  are threatened. If the leaders of my country are showing dream of Bullet trains as they have in Chins and Japan, they should also dream for statistics on Occ.Diseases and injuries.
That we can not see at this moment

Jagdish


On 7 July 2014 19:08, Earl Brown <ebrown@solidaritycenter.org> wrote:
Dear Jadish:  I hope you are well, and it's great to be in touch again.  I would caution on the relative value of bad statistics.   They are not necessarily better than none!  These official PRC statistics must of course be noted and tracked.  But they seriously understand the vast dimensions of the silicosis crisis in China, and reflect an official effort to suppress serious discussion of the problem.  And, I believe based on the important reports emanating from you and Mohit, particularly concerning the progress on compensation in Rajasthan, show that your advocacy is flourishing! Even without statistics.


On Mon, Jul 7, 2014 at 9:07 AM, Jagdish Patel <jagdish.jb@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear Earl,

In India we appreciate China only for the reason that they have some data. India, another Asian country comparable to China in size and population- do not have any such data. Unlike China, India has parliamentary democracy and citizens have right of expression and many other rights which Chinese workers do not enjoy. So, capitalists have conquered Indian society- workers have no control what so ever. With this in mind I appreciate Chinese society and Government.

Jagdish





On 7 July 2014 15:08, Earl Brown <ebrown@solidaritycenter.org> wrote:
I doubt both these figures. There must be way more "new" cases, and probably no decline in the overall population suffering severe silicosis. 

Earl Brown
Solidarity Center

---------------
Many Bangladeshi workers labor in unsafe workplaces for poverty wages. Click here to show solidarity with organizers and activists who are under attack as they stand up for worker rights and safety. 


On Jul 7, 2014, at 2:26, "Mohit Gupta" <mohit.gup@gmail.com> wrote:

China recorded 23,152 new pneumoconiosis cases in 2013, a drop of 1,054 from
the previous year, the country's health authority said on Monday.

Pneumoconiosis is a disease of the lungs caused by the inhalation of large
amounts of dust or particulate matter.

Of the new cases, 13,955 were coal workers and 8,095 were silicosis
sufferers, according to figures released by the National Health and Family
Planning Commission.

The pneumoconiosis cases accounted for 87.7 percent of the country's total
new occupational disease cases, which also included 637 acute occupational
poisonings, 904 chronic occupational poisonings and 1,700 others.

Occupational disease cases from the coal, nonferrous metals, machinery and
construction sectors accounted for more than 73 percent of the annual total.

Figures also showed that last year there were 284 acute occupational
poisoning accidents, leaving 637 people poisoned, 25 of them fatally.

According to the commission, the number of institutions offering
occupational health checkups and diagnosis hit 3,437 and 603 respectively in
2013, up 360 and 41 respectively from the previous year



http://usa.chinadaily.com.cn/life/2014-07/01/content_17630755.htm



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Jagdish Patel
Peoples Training And Research Centre
43,Srinathdham Duplex,
Dinesh Mill -Urmi Rd
VADODARA-390007
Gujarat, INDIA
Ph: +91- 0265- 2345576 (R)
M-94264 86855
Website: www.peoplestraining.org




--
Earl V. Brown Jr
Labor and Employment Law Counsel
China and Law Programs Director
The Solidarity Center
888 16th St. NW
Washington DC 20006
202 494 7920



--
Jagdish Patel
Peoples Training And Research Centre
43,Srinathdham Duplex,
Dinesh Mill -Urmi Rd
VADODARA-390007
Gujarat, INDIA
Ph: +91- 0265- 2345576 (R)
M-94264 86855
Website: www.peoplestraining.org

Monday, July 7, 2014

China sees drop in new pneumoconiosis cases

China recorded 23,152 new pneumoconiosis cases in 2013, a drop of 1,054 from the previous year, the country's health authority said on Monday.

Pneumoconiosis is a disease of the lungs caused by the inhalation of large amounts of dust or particulate matter.

Of the new cases, 13,955 were coal workers and 8,095 were silicosis sufferers, according to figures released by the National Health and Family Planning Commission.

The pneumoconiosis cases accounted for 87.7 percent of the country's total new occupational disease cases, which also included 637 acute occupational poisonings, 904 chronic occupational poisonings and 1,700 others.

Occupational disease cases from the coal, nonferrous metals, machinery and construction sectors accounted for more than 73 percent of the annual total.

Figures also showed that last year there were 284 acute occupational poisoning accidents, leaving 637 people poisoned, 25 of them fatally.

According to the commission, the number of institutions offering occupational health checkups and diagnosis hit 3,437 and 603 respectively in 2013, up 360 and 41 respectively from the previous year

 

http://usa.chinadaily.com.cn/life/2014-07/01/content_17630755.htm

 

All 14 mine workers diagnosed positive of silicosis

JAIPUR: The worst case of silicosis was uncovered when 14 out of 14 mine workers, who had been for a medical examination in Kota, were confirmed positive. The average age of these mine workers is 48 years. The figure is the highest percentage of confirmed cases of silicosis examined by the Pneumoconiosis Board. Sources said these persons will now be provided with monetary relief of Rs 1 lakh by the environmental board.

This is the first time after the amendment in Rajasthan Workmen's Compensation (Occupational Diseases) Rules, 1965 that the Pneumoconiosis Board gathered in Government Medical College & MBS Hospital, Kota to diagnose occupational diseases. Prior to the constitution of the board most of the workers had been diagnosed for tuberculosis.

Under the Workmen Compensation Act, 1923, the state government established Rajasthan Silicosis Rules, 1955. A decade down the line the government came out with Rajasthan Workmen's Compensation (Occupational Diseases) Rules, 1965 under Section 32 of Workmen's Compensation Act, 1923. Under these new set of rules the scope of the occupational diseases was broadened and pneumoconiosis, which covers silicosis or coal miners pneumoconiosis or
asbestosis or any of these diseases accompanied by pulmonary tuberculosis, was mentioned under one of these classes.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/jaipur/All-14-mine-workers-diagnosed-positive-of-silicosis/articleshow/37536023.cms

 

Saturday, June 7, 2014

"Safe" Workplace Solvents Affect Brain Aging

People who regularly work with "safe" solvents such as paint or degreasers face an increased risk of thought and memory problems as they age, according to a recent study.

The study, published in the journal Neurology on May 13, details how researchers determined that individuals who work in construction or utilities face heightened risk of advanced cognitive decline as they age. They associated this decline with regular exposure to regulated solvents such as benzene, chlorine, and petroleum.

According to the study, researchers interviewed and assessed the cognitive capabilities of 2,143 retirees from the French national utility company Electricite de France/Gaz de France.

Through questionnaires and interviews, the researchers measured each participant's past exposure to benzene, found in dyes, detergent, rubber and plastic; chlorinated solvents, found in dry cleaning products, paint removers, degreasers, and engine cleaners; and petroleum solvents, used in varnish, paint thinner, paint, and carpet glue.

The retirees were followed from retirement until they reached the age of about 66, when they were asked to take a series of tests in a follow-up assessment of their cognitive abilities. They found that in an average of 10 years after retirement, 59 percent of the participants faced minor to moderate cognitive impairment and 23 percent of the participants showed heavy impairment - scoring poorly on four or more tests out of eight total.

Predictably, the researchers were able to determine that the workers who had more frequent and recent exposure to harmful solvents prior to retiring were significantly more likely to develop cognitive impairment. Chlorinated solvents proved the worst in this regard, making those frequently exposed to it 65 percent more likely to have impaired memory, visual attention, and fluid thinking, compared to workers not exposed to the solvents.

It should be noted that while the aforementioned chemicals are highly controlled products in most countries, only immediate ramifications are often considered when discussing workplace safety precautions. The authors of the study write that it is their hope that statistics like these can change that.

Protecting worker health, they write, will not only protect their brains as they age, but will also reduce health-care costs and allow workers to work past the current average retirement age.

 

http://www.natureworldnews.com/articles/7024/20140513/safe-workplace-solvents-affect-brain-aging.htm

 

Monday, June 2, 2014

Death of 8 workers trapped in fire should be wake-up call for PH-labor group

MANILA, Philippines – It’s not the first time that workers were killed in a fire after being trapped in a padlocked building. And it might happen again if the government doesn’t move fast, a labor safety organization said.

The Institute for Occupational Health and Safety for Development (Iohsad) claimed that the employer of the eight women who died of suffocation after their warehouse was engulfed in flames last May 30 should be held accountable for violating his workers’ right to safe workplaces.

The employer, a Chinese businessman named Juanito Go, denied accusations that he padlocked the workers in the second floor room of a warehouse along P. Samonte Street, Barangay (village) 47 in Pasay City.

But Iohsaid pointed out that the lack of a fire escape was enough evidence of poor working conditions.

“Reports said that the workers who survived the tragedy escaped through a narrow hole in the building. This is a clear violation of Rule 1943.03 of the Philippine Occupational Health and Standards (OHSS) that outlines the need to have at least 2 exits in every floor and basement capable of clearing the work area in five minutes,” the group said in a statement.

Iohsad Executive Director Noel Colina said the “tragedy confirms our country’s recent inclusion in the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) report as one of the worst countries to work in.”

The ITUC’s 2014 Global Rights Index, released two weeks ago, gave the Philippines a rate of “5,” joining countries like India, Saudi Arabia, Cambodia and other countries where there is “no guarantee of rights.”

“Countries with the rating of 5 are the worst countries in the world to work in. While the legislation may spell out certain rights workers have effectively no access to these rights and are therefore exposed to autocratic regimes and unfair labor practices,” ITUC explained.

“More and more workers are forced to work in unsafe and inhumane conditions. In the case of the eight workers, they had to endure working and staying in a padlocked warehouse that eventually caused their precious lives,” Colina said.

He pointed out that in May 9, 2012, 18 female workers of Novo Jeans and Shirts Department Store in Butuan City also died after being trapped in a burning building.

“We reiterate our call to the government to criminalize occupational health and safety violations to protect the workers and make companies liable for work-related deaths,” Colina said.

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/607331/death-of-8-workers-trapped-in-fire-should-be-wake-up-call-for-ph-labor-group

 

Saturday, May 31, 2014

Shipyard now a model of safety

Bangladesh, known for its frequent factory disasters, has also emerged as a model of workplace safety.

 

The Western Marine Shipyard Limited’s (WMShL) occupational health and safety approach has been recognised as the “best practice” by none other than the German government, a sticker for workplace safety standards.

Germany also happens to be one of Bangladesh's largest export markets.

The approach that cut workplace injuries by 99 percent in the Chittagong-based shipyard has been implemented with the help of the German development arm, GIZ.

State Minister for Labour and Employment Md Mojibul Haque Chunnu on Tuesday inaugurated a German publication containing the Shipyard’s success stories.

He appreciated them and said it showed “it's possible to ensure workers safety in workplaces”.

The measures were simple but tough to implement, the shipyard's Managing Director Shakhawat Hossain said.

 

http://bdnews24.com/business/2014/05/28/shipyard-now-a-model-of-safety

 

Saturday, April 26, 2014

FW: [Anroev: 1996] 4.5L child workers in e-waste industry: Assocham report

BANGALORE: A study by an industry body has found that there are about 4.5 lakh child workers in the 10-14 age group engaged in e-waste (electronic waste) activities, without adequate protection and safeguards in various yards and recycling workshops.

The Associated Chamber of Commerce and Industry in India (Assocham), in its study released on Monday, said a meagre four per cent of India's total e-waste gets recycled due to poor infrastructure, legislation and framework which lead to a waste of diminishing natural resources, irreparable damage of environment and health of the people working in industry.

"Over 95 per cent of e-waste generated is managed by the unorganized sector and scrap dealers in this market, who dismantle disposed products instead of recycling it," the study titled 'Electronic Waste Management in India' finds. Assocham said the study was carried out in collaboration with consulting firm Frost & Sullivan.

D S Rawat, secretary general, Assocham said, "The informal recycling industry often employs children to dismantle electronic waste. Our report strongly advocates legislation to prevent a child's entry into this labour market. The chamber has also strongly advocated the need to bring out effective legislation to prevent entry of child labour into its collection, segregation and distribution."

 

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/bangalore/4-5L-child-workers-in-e-waste-industry-Assocham-report/articleshow/34066788.cms

 

4.5L child workers in e-waste industry: Assocham report

BANGALORE: A study by an industry body has found that there are about 4.5 lakh child workers in the 10-14 age group engaged in e-waste (electronic waste) activities, without adequate protection and safeguards in various yards and recycling workshops.

The Associated Chamber of Commerce and Industry in India (Assocham), in its study released on Monday, said a meagre four per cent of India's total e-waste gets recycled due to poor infrastructure, legislation and framework which lead to a waste of diminishing natural resources, irreparable damage of environment and health of the people working in industry.

"Over 95 per cent of e-waste generated is managed by the unorganized sector and scrap dealers in this market, who dismantle disposed products instead of recycling it," the study titled 'Electronic Waste Management in India' finds. Assocham said the study was carried out in collaboration with consulting firm Frost & Sullivan.

D S Rawat, secretary general, Assocham said, "The informal recycling industry often employs children to dismantle electronic waste. Our report strongly advocates legislation to prevent a child's entry into this labour market. The chamber has also strongly advocated the need to bring out effective legislation to prevent entry of child labour into its collection, segregation and distribution."

 

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/bangalore/4-5L-child-workers-in-e-waste-industry-Assocham-report/articleshow/34066788.cms

 

Monday, April 14, 2014

[Pakistan]Court moved against emission from crushing factories

Court moved against emission from crushing factories

 

 

LAHORE

 

A writ petition has been moved in the Lahore High Court against emission of fatal silica powder by stone crushing factories in Punjab, resulting in the death of labourers and causing mortal diseases like lung cancer.

 

The Public Lawyers Front (PLF) filed the petition through advocate Raheel Kamran Sheikh, saying that Tahir and Qaiser had contracted silicosis during the course of their work at a stone crushing factory owned and operated by Ashraf Ansari, located at Gujranwala. They eventually died of this occupational disease while other workers were seriously ill.

 

The petitioner said that, due to the absence of a dust control mechanism, a dust cloud would be raised in the premises of the factory. Labourers would mix the powdered stone with boric acid. The shoveling of powdered silica with boric acid again raised a massive dust storm causing the victims to further inhale the silica powder.

 

After a year of continuous inhalation of the silica powder, some of the victims frequently started suffering from high fever accompanied by acute cough. In most cases, even qualified doctors were unable to correctly diagnose the lung diseases, especially silicosis, because symptoms of silicosis are very similar to tuberculosis, the petitioner adds.

 

He said that death due to silicosis and similar occupational lung diseases was a common tragedy experienced by stone-crushing factory workers and their families not only in Gujranwala but all over Punjab, including cities like Lahore, Rawalpindi, and D.G. Khan, with many of the lives lost belonging to the same family or village.

 

The presence of factory workers was necessary during the manufacturing process of stone-crushing, a process which led to the airborne emission of silica dust/ crystalline silica, exposure to which was certain to cause incurable lung diseases, including silicosis, silico-tuberculosis and lung cancer.

 

That the contraction of occupational diseases, especially silicosis, at stone-crushing factories is directly attributable to the gross negligence on the part of factory owners, the state agencies are responsible for the implementation of labour welfare and environment laws in Pakistan. Despite the fact that inhalation of silica dust is fatal, the inevitability of which is commonly known to factory administrators, they continue to condone the hazard by failing to take even very basic preventative action, such as providing effective masks and watering down the dust particles.

 

He said emissions at stone-crushing factories of silica dust, which is a pollutant and hazardous substance within the meaning of clause (xvii) of Section 2 of the Punjab Environment Protection Act, 1997. He said that, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), occupational exposure to respirable crystalline silica was not only associated with silicosis but with other fatal diseases including lung cancer, pulmonary tuberculosis, and airways disease. In addition, it may be related to development of autoimmune disorders, chronic renal disease and other adverse health effects. Similarly, the U.S. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) conducted a review of the large body of international health-related silica literature and published the results in 2002.

 

NIOSH found that occupational exposure to respirable crystalline silica was associated with the development of several diseases including silicosis, and may be related to the development of others. The results of the NIOSH review were incorporated into the WHO Concise International Chemical Assessment Document (CICAD) on quartz.

http://www.thenews.com.pk/Todays-News-5-243890-Court-moved-against-emission-from-crushing-factories

 

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Re: [Anroev: 1964] Pakistan: Nurses Strike for Rights

Latest from Nurses' Strike:
The strike ended yesterday after government announced an initial 3 year contract and then to regularize the jobs of nurses. These were 2,800 contract nurses in Punjab province government hospital who went on strike when Punjab government started sacking them and asked them to apply again for jobs through Public Service Commission. These nurses were hired in last few years as the need for new nurses arose in government hospitals. 
These brave nurses were on roads day and night for 8 consecutive days, which is a historical struggle in Pakistan. I have added few pictures of their sit-in on The Mall Road in Lahore on my facebook (https://www.facebook.com/khalid.malik.13).
Best,
Khalid 

______________
Khalid Mahmood
Director
Labour Education Foundation
House# 97-C, Ahbab Park, Habibullah Road, Garhi Shahu, Lahore, Pakistan. 
Tel: +92 42 36303808, Fax: +92 42 36271149
Mobile: +92 321 9402322
www.lef.org.pk
khalid@lef.org.pk
Skyp: khalidmalik13 


On Tue, Mar 18, 2014 at 2:51 PM, Mohit Gupta <mohit.gup@gmail.com> wrote:

16 March 2014: Hundreds of nurses are still occupying Lahore main Mall Road Lahore. They are demanding permanent jobs instead of adhoc appointments. Yesterday police had lathi charged the but nurses fought back. Today most of the trade unions and political parties came to express solidarity. Punjab government has not yet accepted their demands and nurses has announced to continue struggle. All Pakistan Para Medical Staff Federation and young doctors are here to be with them. See report below from Pakistan Today, an editorial from Daily Times and URLS to other reports]

 

http://www.sacw.net/article7948.html

 

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Hill of death

During a film shoot at the beautiful Roro hill in Jharkhand’s Chaibasa district, the villain takes out his gun to kill a young man. The moment he shoots, onlooker Rango Deogam bursts into laughter and yells at the camera crew, “You are shooting a death scene on the hill of death.”

The shoot is stopped because of his outrageous act and Deogam is escorted out when he starts coughing blood.

The 65-year-old resident of the Roro village then clears his throat and says, “That’s death.” Deogam is not the only one in the Roro village who is coughing blood. An estimated 200 people in the 14 villages near the Roro hill are dying slowly from a lung disease called abestosis because of an abandoned crysotile asbestos mine in the area. “The exact number of the victims can only be known after an extensive medical camp is held in the affected villages,” says Punit Minz, convener of Bindrai Institute for Research Study and Action (BIRSA), a non-profit that has been working in the area for the past decade to educate the residents about the problems with asbestos.

http://www.downtoearth.org.in/content/hill-death

 

Pakistan: Nurses Strike for Rights

16 March 2014: Hundreds of nurses are still occupying Lahore main Mall Road Lahore. They are demanding permanent jobs instead of adhoc appointments. Yesterday police had lathi charged the but nurses fought back. Today most of the trade unions and political parties came to express solidarity. Punjab government has not yet accepted their demands and nurses has announced to continue struggle. All Pakistan Para Medical Staff Federation and young doctors are here to be with them. See report below from Pakistan Today, an editorial from Daily Times and URLS to other reports]

 

http://www.sacw.net/article7948.html

 

Saturday, March 8, 2014

The Chemicals That Stick Around in the Body

Most Americans do carry traces of dozens—possibly hundreds—of potentially toxic chemicals in their bodies, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which tests blood and urine samples in thousands of citizens as part of its continuing public-health surveys.

But just because a chemical is present doesn't mean it will cause health problems, the CDC says. In many cases, scientists don't know what level of exposure might pose harm or to what extent people's individual genes, age, weight and other factors vary the risk.

Many of the chemicals people are exposed to in food, air and water exit the body via waste or sweat within hours, experts say. Some of the most hazardous don't—and can't be removed with a detox diet, soaking in ionized water or purging the colon frequently.

"There is very little hard scientific data to support that these cleansing tools eliminate significant levels of these chemicals," says Linda Birnbaum, director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Studies, the federal agency that investigates environmental effects on health.

http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304360704579417241249848968

[Silicosis Panna]Give reasons reasons for delay in relief: HRC

INDORE: Taking an exception to the deaths from silicosis in Panna, the National Human Rights Commission ( NHRC) issued a notice on Thursday to the chief secretary asking him to explain the reasons for not giving relief to the kin of the deceased on time.

The state government has been given eight weeks’ time to reply to the notice. The NHRC also wanted to know from the government the measures it is taking for the workers down with the disease.

The commission feels that the state has failed to protect lives of three Panna workers: Bal Krishna Durga, Ramjan Khan and Asharam Gaund.

The NHRC also said the chief secretary should ask the Panna district magistrate to get all the quarry workers examined by a team of doctors and submit a report. The team should also mention the names of the employers/firms they are working with.

The commission said the district magistrate should be asked to ensure free treatment to the rest of the workers.

The commission observed: “The administration should also find out the possibility of an alternative employment for those suffering from silicosis.”

Earlier, there were reports that only Jhabua and Alirajpur were racked with silicosis. In August, 2011, Environics Trust had held a medical camp in Panna, and out of 40 workers examined 36 were found to have been afflicted with silicosis.

In January 2012, the trust had submitted a complaint to the NHRC requesting it to direct the state government to take steps for their treatment and compensation to the family of one person out of 36 who died after the check-up.

Read More

 

Poisonous Mine Shut Down in China's Hunan Province

Asia’s largest realgar mine has been shut down, leaving behind massive arsenic contamination with ill and dying people in surrounding villages.

The 1,500 year-old mine, located in Baiyun Township, Shimen County, in China’s Hunan Province, once a source for a Chinese medicinal supplement, has gradually become a toxic wasteland during the past six decades. 

Arsenic contaminated soil and water within 9 square kilometers (5.5 square miles) of the mine has poisoned more than a thousand villagers, according to a report by Legal Weekly, a mainland Chinese media.

Hu Lizhen, a local villager, said five of her 11 family members have already been diagnosed with arsenic poisoning, but not all of them have been checked yet.

Another villager said the water is not drinkable, and they have to get water from outside.

People from surrounding areas won’t buy vegetables from these contaminated villages. So, residents have no choice but to eat their own crops due to financial hardship. 

People who suffer from arsenic poisoning are usually bedridden, unable to straighten their fingers, and their skin is marked with dark bumps. If the arsenic poisoning is not treated early, it develops into skin or lung cancer. 

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Reforms slow in Bangladesh's toxic tanneries

Dhaka (AFP) - Standing knee deep in toxic chemicals, Mokter Hossain loads animal hides into huge drums filled with still more dangerous liquids at a tannery in the Bangladesh capital.

Barefoot and sick with fever, Hossain stops every now and then to cough, a legacy of the job that his doctors warn could one day kill him.

"Some days I am too ill to work," said Hossain, 25, who has spent years inhaling fumes from the hexavalent chromium and other chemicals used to turn the raw hides into soft leather.

"I take medicine to control my skin diseases. If I don't, it gets worse," Hossain adds, gesturing to his arms and legs which are covered in rashes and black spots.

Hossain's tannery is one of 200 in Hazaribagh in Dhaka, where some 25,000 workers toil for as little as $50 a month to produce leather for shoes and other goods for stores in Europe and the United States.

Ten months ago, Western retailers were forced into action after a garment factory complex collapsed killing 1,135 people, one of a string of tragedies that have shone a global spotlight on that sector's shocking labour and safety conditions.

But there are few signs of reform at Bangladesh's leather industry, where conditions are equally atrocious and business is booming thanks to the West's growing demand for cheap leather items.

Top local activist Rizwana Hasan blames a lack of headline grabbing disasters in the industry that could make consumers think twice about where their shoes and bags are made.

 

http://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/business/world/a/21780324/reforms-slow-in-bangladeshs-toxic-tanneries/

 

Saturday, March 1, 2014

[Cambodia] Phone project shows worker knowledge improving

Findings from the second phase of a pioneering mobile phone call-in project in Cambodia suggest garment and footwear workers are improving their knowledge about labour rights, occupational safety and health, and personal health.

The Kamako Chhnoeum ("Outstanding Worker" in Khmer) project is organised by the International Labour Organization's Better Factories Cambodia (BFC) programme.

Launched on 1 September last year, it gathers information about the level of knowledge the workers possess, as well as recorded factory-specific information. Initial results were released in a report in late October.

Results of the second phase covering November and December showed 1,991 valid calls were received - a drop on the 3,245 recoded in the first two months, which the BFC partially blamed on widespread strikes and factory closures across the industry.

Key findings show 24% of the callers incorrectly believe that workers on strike are entitled to receive wages - although this figure is an improvement over the previous reporting period in which 32% of callers answered this question incorrectly.

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Friday, February 28, 2014

Fourth victim of deadly silicosis in 2014 fails to wake up Gujarat officialdom to pay up compensation

Poonabhai Ramabhai Parmar, 59, has become the fourth victim of the deadly silicosis disease -- which is rampant in and around Khambhat town of Central Gujarat -- this year. Parmar breathed his last on February 25 night. Large number of locals joined his funeral on February 26 morning. Informing about his death, Jagdish Patel, senior social activist of the state-based NGO People’s Training and Research Centre (PTRC), Vadodara, said, “Parmar worked in a textile mill in Khambhat till 1994, and when mill was closed he turned to agate polishing. He was diagnosed of silicosis at Sri Krishna Hospital, Karamsad, in December 2012. He was bedridden for the few months.”
Patel, who is one of India’s topmost campaigners against the occupational disease, said, “This is the fourth death in 2014 following the death of Rukhiben Jethabhai, Isub Ibrahim and Nannusha Diwan. In 2013, as many as 14 male and 2 female workers died of silicosis.” He regretted, “In 2012 Government of Gujarat declared a welfare scheme for the workers dying of silicosis according to which Rs 1 was to be paid to the dependents. For technical reasons the scheme could not take off.”
Pointing out that recently the Government of Gujarat declared revised scheme, Patel said, “Accordingly, now the amount of Rs 1 lakh is to be given by the board for unorganized sector workers and not any insurance company. The scheme is to be implemented by the Rural Labour Commissioner (RLC). A resolution passed on January 4, 2013 reads that the rules should be drafted jointly by the director, Industrial Safety and Health (DISH) and the RLC to implement the government’s revised scheme.”

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Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Plastic exposure to women in the workplace could lead to health risks

To make plastic parts, such as bumpers and dashboards, pellets are heated in huge injection molding machines. These machines sometimes eject sticky plastic that smokes and smoulders and that workers can breathe in.

Many of these chemicals have been shown to be endocrine disruptors and carcinogens in animals.

Jim Brophy, a retired Executive Director of the Occupational Health Clinic for Ontario Workers (OHCOW) and lead author of the study is worried the chemicals used to make these plastics could be affecting the health of women who work in the plants and increasing their chance of getting breast cancer. Brophy wants the government to do more to protect workers and worries that the Ministry of Labour is not doing enough to minimize exposure.

 

Leon Genesove, the Ontario Ministry of Labour’s top doctor, says the Ministry is working with health and safety associations to assist employers “in eliminating hazards in the workplace, substituting with less hazardous chemicals if necessary. Implementing engineering controls, and assisting them with other control measures.”

Genesove cites a workplace safety blitz from October and November of 2012 where inspectors looked at dangerous conditions in the manufacturing sector.

 

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Monday, February 24, 2014

Lack of mining exposure norms rued

NAGPUR: Noise, dust, vibrations, heat, UV sunlight, etc, are certain occupational hazards that miners' face during their regular work. Except for noise and dust, there are no standards for these exposures in India. The country needs standards for these exposures, especially in Indian mining conditions. Hence academic and scientific institutes should take a lead to first recognize and assess the potentially hazardous agents and then formulate standards.

These views were expressed by the former deputy director general of directorate of mine safety (DGMS) at Nagpur, RB Chakarborty while delivering the foundation day lecture of city-based National Institute of Miners' Health (NIMH) 'Safe Mines and Healthy Miners: Issues and Priorities'. The institute entered its silver jubilee year on Friday.

Miners suffer from a variety of occupational diseases like loss of hearing, pneumoconiosis, asbestosis (chronic inflammation of lungs), poisoning due to inhalation of metals and miners nystagmus (involuntary eye movement) due to darkness, skin cancers, lung cancers and tuberculosis. India has a unique blend of big and small, manual and mechanized, opencast and underground mines. Most of them are government-run but there are private players who violate rules. Hence, the standards should be formulated considering these factors too.

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World Bank Agrees to Investigate Labor Conditions at Indian Tea Company

The World Bank has agreed to investigate Amalgamated Plantations Private Limited (APPL) in India for abusive working conditions on tea plantations in the north-eastern Indian state of Assam, following a formal complaint by workers. A Columbia Law School team has confirmed the workers allegations.

In 2009, the International Finance Corporation (IFC), an arm of the World Bank, 
invested $6.7 million into the newly created APPL to take over 25 plantationsfrom the Tata Group, a major Indian multinational. In return, the IFC got a 19.9 percent in the new entity while Tata kept 41 percent ownership. The 31,000 workers on the plantations were allowed to buy shares in the new company at Rs 10 ($0.20) per share.

 

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Friday, February 21, 2014

Another film to document ill Samsung factory workers

A citizen fund-raising campaign is under way to support the theatrical release of “The Empire of Shame,” a documentary on occupational diseases among Samsung Electronics semiconductor plant workers by director Hong Li-gyeong.

The move comes amid a wave of support for director Kim Tae-youn’s “Another Family,” which is based on the story of one worker’s struggle with leukemia and eventual death.

The distributor, CinemaDAL, started the campaign to support the film’s release on Jan. 29 by setting the goal of raising 30 million won (US$28,200) through the social funding site Tumblbug. As of Feb. 17, it reported raising almost 18 million won (US$17,500) from 554 donors.

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Urgent need to recycle rare metals

The demand for metals such as neodymium (Nd) and dysprosium (Dy) is increasing much faster than production. These metals are used in technologies such as the generators that store power in wind turbines, and the electric motors that propel electric and hybrid cars. But they are also used in everyday products like computers and mobile phones.

Rare earth metals do occur in Earth's crust, but not in sufficiently high concentrations. This is why only one country -- China -- has so far been supplying the entire world with these elements. However, in recent years, China has begun to restrict its export of these materials

 

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Monday, February 17, 2014

Apple in conflict mineral 'name and shame' crackdown

Apple has begun publicising which of its suppliers may be sourcing minerals from conflict zones.

Conflict minerals, as they are known, are mined in areas of fighting or human rights abuses, such as the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The first published list detailed 104 suppliers that were unverified for compliance with ethical guidelines.

Electronics firms are being pressured by human rights groups to use their influence to force suppliers to change.

Most electronic devices contain either gold, tantalum, tin or tungsten. The gathering of these raw materials is often controlled by violent militias who may profit greatly from the activity.

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Notices likely to 75 leases for illegal mining in Odisha

NEW DELHI: The Centre may issue show cause notices to companies, including SAIL, Tata SteelBSE 0.15 %, Essel Mining, JSPL and OMC, that hold 75 leases where illegal mining of iron and manganese ores was found by the Shah Commission.

The step would be in addition to legal action being initiated by the Odisha government against firms that carried out mining operations without environmental and other clearances. 

Read more at:

 

Over 150 FIRs filed in two weeks over illegal mining

ALWAR/JAIPUR: In the past 12 days since an anti-mining campaign was launched, joint teams of various departments have lodged over 150 FIRs and arrested 57 people in connection with illegal mining in the state. The officials claim this data show the drive has been effective so far though it has proved to be eyewash in some parts of the state, especially in Mewat region.

Owing to lack of coordination among various departments involved in the drive and growing fearlessness among the miners, the drive has not seen any substantiate success. Mining mafia is attacking the government teams. At least four such attacks have been reported in Alwar district.

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Thursday, January 30, 2014

The Curse of Asbestos

Victims launch an international offensive to revoke the titles and awards of billionaire Stephan Schmidheiny, former owner of the Swiss Eternit Group. In Brazil, they are focusing on the Order of the Southern Cross, granted to him by President Fernando Henrique Cardoso

If it is up to asbestos victims, 2014 may be the worst year in the life of Swiss billionaire Stephan Schmidheiny. They are getting ready to open another front in the struggle to ban the carcinogenic fiber. This time, they are looking at something perhaps more valuable than the actual fortune of the businessman whose family founded the Swiss Eternit Group. Throughout the 20th century, the industrial group planted factories around the world and through them sowed fatal diseases such as asbestosis (known as “stone lung”) and mesothelioma (the so-called “asbestos cancer”). Now, the target of patients and their families is the intangible property to which the Swiss [tycoon] devoted much money, battalions of marketers and his greatest efforts: his biography.

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Wednesday, January 29, 2014

India's coal inferno

Champa's eyes are surrounded by dark circles and her face is thin and drawn. It began with a fever, pain in her limbs, and she was then diagnosed with tuberculosis.

"I was diagnosed with TB two years ago now. I have been on medication but I am not getting any better. I have difficulty breathing and even talking is hard. It has been like this for five or six years - ever since the plant started, our problems have started too."

 

http://www.theecologist.org/News/news_analysis/2250064/indias_coal_inferno.html

[Singapore]New rules to make asbestos disposal safer

Effective from May 1, the measures will benefit both workers and public

THE removal of asbestos could be safer for workers and the public after the Workplace Safety and Health (WSH) Council and Ministry of Manpower (MOM) spelt out enhanced regulations yesterday for work involving the building material, now known to cause serious illness.

The new rules specify that companies must have a proper workplan to deal with asbestos, including a risk assessment, if it is present. They must also notify MOM seven days before starting work that involves asbestos.

 

http://www.singaporelawwatch.sg/slw/headlinesnews/36325-new-rules-to-make-asbestos-disposal-safer.html

 

Regards

Mohit

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

In Philippines, workers toil among hazards in compressor mining

SANTA MILAGROSA, Philippines -- Brian Mullaton is 13 years old and makes his living by diving into deep, muddy holes.

He works on a floating wooden platform in shallow Mambulao Bay in what is one of the world's most dangerous professions: compressor mining.

On a typical day, he makes the equivalent of $5.

"Sometimes, I am scared to go down because of the possibility it will collapse," said Brian, the fourth of nine children in his family. "But I like the job because I get money. I give the money to my parents for food."

Read More

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/rundown/2014/01/in-philippines-workers-toil-among-hazards-in-compressor-mining.html