Terjemahan Bahasa Melayu - Kenyataan Hari Peringatan Pekerja Maut Antarabangsa (28 April) - Berkabung untuk yang mati, Berjuang untuk yang hidup
Media Statement (40 Groups) – 28/4/2020
Media Statement (40 Groups) – 28/4/2020
International Workers’ Memorial Day Statement
Mourn for dead, Fight for the living
Mere Remembrance of Dead Workers without Enacting New Laws to ensure
future safety of the Living is Meaningless
On the occasion of the International
Workers’ Memorial Day or Workers’ Mourning Day, celebrated annually on April 28, we, the 40 undersigned groups and trade unions lament the fact that
workers’ death at worksites, have not resulted in the Malaysian government’s
enactment of laws, regulations and standards that will prevent future deaths or
injury in a similar situation.
International Workers’ Memorial
Day or Workers’ Mourning Day is the international day of remembrance and action
for workers killed, disabled, injured or made unwell by their work. The slogan
for the day is Mourn for the dead, Fight for the living.
While we mourn the loss of lives
and injuries of workers, we struggle and fight for the living with the object
of reducing risk of future loss of life and injury at the work place.
In Malaysia, in 2018, there were
611 fatal accident cases. In 2017, there were 711 fatal accident cases.
(Bernama, 11/07/2018; Star, 7/1/2020). Interestingly, the Department of
Occupational Safety and Health (DOSH) records of fatal accident cases investigated
in 2017 and 2018, are only 206 and 260 respectively, which means that
investigations are yet to be completed even in so cases that resulted in death.
The construction sector records
one of the highest number of fatalities. The Occupational Safety and Health
Department’s (DOSH) statistics recorded 169 deaths and 3,911 accidents in the
construction sector for 2018.( NST, 15/2/2020) The rate of fatality per 100,000
workers in the construction sector is 13.44 in 2018, as compared to 14.57 in
2017.
Malaysia’s Fatal Accident Rate
(FAR) was not only 10 times worse than that of the United Kingdom but had in
fact deteriorated by 20 per cent since the turn of the century, according to a
Construction Industry Development Board report.
Deaths by reason of trench collapses – death by being buried alive
Jalmi, an Indonesian worker in his 20s, died after he was buried in
a three-metre drain during excavation works in Shah Alam, Selangor in October
2015. (NST, 5/10/2015).
In March 2015, it was reported
that 2 construction workers in Machang, Kelantan, a local man and a Myanmar
national were killed when earth
collapsed and buried them in the hole whilst they were working on a water
supply pipe project .(NST, 30/3/2015).
In September 2015, A Bangladeshi
construction worker was killed in Kuala Lumpur after he was buried in a pile of
soil, after the victim and his colleague had earlier dug a hole about
three-meters deep to install underground pipes.(NST, 30/9/2015)
Nicholas anak Jawan, a 33-year-old worker, was killed in Sarawak
after he was buried alive while building a deep monsoon drain (Malay Mail,
3/12/2019)
Md Shoriful, 43, and Julhas
Rahman, 27, were killed when they were buried by mounds of falling earth at
a housing project construction site in Mentakab, Temerloh where they were
carrying out sewage pipe installation works. (BERNAMA/New Straits Times,
6/3/2020)
There will be much more similar
cases, which unfortunately not all would have been reported by the media.
Sadly, media reports also fails to respectfully name the workers who died, and
also fails to make mention of the names of the companies and/or employers who
may be responsible for these fatal accidents.
In the commemoration of this year’s IWMD, we call upon the Malaysian
government to:
1. Enact and enforce laws and regulations that
impose mandatory obligations to prevent further deaths in the future
Death by such trench collapses in
Malaysia, and also all over the world, have been happening for years, and the
question is why are there still no specific laws and regulations in place that
will prevent such deaths in similar situations in the future.
What ought to be in such laws
could be the requirement for needed supports and/or battering to prevent the
soil from collapsing on workers working in such pits or trenches. The requirement
for the need for safety inspection of the site by a competent person, before a
worker is asked to enter any hole or trench of more than 1 meter depth, noting
that safety will also be affected by type of soil, weather on that day,
vibration caused by machines operating nearby or other reasons.
Specific regulations and
standards are needed, rather than vague general laws that simply talk about ‘so
far as practicable’ general obligations of safety and health. In some other
countries, there are already laws that specifically deal with this like The
Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015 in United Kingdom,
and
There are so many employers and
companies involved in construction works in Malaysia, and it absurd to expect
them to know of all the dangers and risks involved in the various different
aspects of their work. Employers and companies, may not be aware of the risks
discovered at other worksites following some accidents, and as such may still
be carrying out work in the same risky life-threatening manner through
ignorance.
Thus, it is only reasonable and incumbent
for the government, who has the data and expertise with regard to occupational
safety and health issues, to do the needful through the making of needed regulations
and/or laws, which includes steps to be taken by employers to ensure safety.
Every worksite incident that
results in an accident, injury and/or death of a worker, ought to teach us what
need to be done now to prevent future mishaps that may result in death of
workers. The government is duty bound to take steps to ensure similar accidents
do not recur anywhere, and the best solution is the enactment of clear laws,
rules and regulations that will not only highlight the dangers, but will also
make sure that employers and companies do the needful to reduce risk of death
and injury. Mere guidelines or advisories are insufficient.
2. Make public and create awareness of Laws,
Regulations and Standard Operating Procedures (SOP)
It is often that government mentions about SOPs and
other legal requirements, but sadly many of these are not even known to workers
and the public, thus making it impossible for people to even highlight actions
and/or situations when employers and companies do not follow the law.
All applicable laws, regulations
and SOPs must be made available to the public, including all websites of
agencies, departments and Ministries having the responsibility for occupational
safety and health.
3. Ensure deterrent sentences to reduce
non-compliance, and reduce death and injury of workers
Worker lives and wellbeing are of
primary importance, and as such penalty for employers and companies that breach
laws that protect the safety and health of workers must be deterrent if Malaysia is truly concerned about
human lives.
Currently penalties for violation
of Occupational Safety and Health laws are fines, and a maximum of 2 years
imprisonment. However, there seem to be no employers or Directors of companies
that have been sent to prison, even when their failings have resulted in death
and injury to workers. It is Directors and owners of companies that sometimes,
to save cost, who choose to negate duties and obligations to do the needful to
ensure worker safety and health.
Kevin Otto, owner of Atlantic
Drain Services, a company in US was recently sentenced to two years
imprisonment after being found guilty of two counts of manslaughter for the
deaths of two employees, Robert Higgins and Kelvin Mattocks, who drowned in
October 2018 in an unprotected, 14’ deep trench following a water main break.
He was further penalized with three years’ probation following his sentence,
and he can never again employ anyone in a job that involves excavation. (ISHN,
17/12/2019).
In other jurisdictions, stringent
laws with higher penalties, including new offences, are being enacted with the
object of reducing risk of life and injury to workers. In Australia, Industrial
Manslaughter laws have been introduced.
LET NOT THE DEATH OF WORKERS NOT BE IN VAIN. PREVENT SIMILAR ACCIDENTS
TO REDUCE FUTURE RISK OF LIVES OF OTHER WORKERS.
Charles Hector
Apolinar Tolentino
For and on behalf of the following 40 groups
ALIRAN
WH4C(Workers Hub For Change)
Associated Labour Union,
Philippines
Association of Human Rights
Defenders and Promoters- HRDP in Myanmar
Building and Wood Workers
International (BWI) Asia Pacific Region
Building and Wood Workers’
Federation of Myanmar
Center for Orang Asli Concerns(COAC)
Clean Clothes Campaign(CCC) South
East Asian Coalition
Confederation of Trade
Unions Myanmar – CTUM
Electrical Trades Union of
Australia
IMA Research Foundation,
Bangladesh
International Black Women for
Wages for Housework
Kesatuan Pekerja Atlas Edible Ice
Sdn Bhd
Kesatuan Sekerja Industri
Elektronik Wilayah Selatan, Semenanjung Malaysia (KSIEWSSM)/Electronic Industry
Employees Union Southern Region Peninsular Malaysia(EIEUSRPM)
Labour Behind the Label
MADPET (Malaysians Against Death
Penalty and Torture)
MARUAH, Singapore
Marvi Rural Development
Organization (MRDO), Pakistan
Migrant Care, Indonesia
NAMM (Network of Action for
Migrants in Malaysia)
National Union of Transport
Equipment & Allied Industries Workers (NUTEAIW)
National Union of Flight
Attendants Malaysia (NUFAM)
North South Initiative (NSI)
Odhikar, Bangladesh
Persatuan Sahabat Wanita Selangor
Safety and Rights Society (SRS),
Bangladesh
Tenaganita, Malaysia
Timber Employees Union of
Peninsula Malaysia
Union Network International-
Malaysia Labour Centre (UNI-MLC)
Women of Color/Global Women’s
Strike, United Kingdom
Bangladesh Group THE Netherlands
Persatuan Kesedaran Komuniti
Selangor (EMPOWER)
Sabah Timber Industry Employees
Union (STIEU)
African Resources Watch
(Afrewatch)
Association Of Home And Maquila
Workers, ATRAHDOM- Guatemala.
Parti Sosialis Malaysia(PSM)
AMMPO-SENTRO - Asosasyon ng mga
Makabayang Manggagawang Pilipino Overseas - Sentro ng mga Nagkakaisa at
Progresibong Manggagawa (Association of Nationalist Filipino Workers- Sentro a
labor center in the Philippines)
Payday Men’s Network UK
Payday Men’s Network US
Workers Assistance Center, Inc. Philippines
Datuk Dr Ronald McCoy
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