S. Korea: Occupational disease & deaths disproportionately high among migrant workers, as program criticised over worker immobility, wage & physical abuse; incl. co. comment
Résumé
Date indiquée: 30 Oct 2023
Lieu: Corée du Sud
Entreprises
Ansung Industrial - EmployerConcerné
Nombre total de personnes concernées: 1
Travailleurs migrants et immigrés: ( Chiffre inconnu - Bangladesh , Industries : Généralités , Gender not reported )Enjeux
Santé et sécurité au travail , Maladie , Pollution atmosphérique , Horaires de travail et temps libre raisonnables , Mobilité restreinte , Accès aux médicaments , Refus de congéRéponse
Réponse demandée : Oui, par LA Times
Lien externe vers la réponse: (En savoir plus)
Mesures prises: An Ansung manager declined to answer question on the case but the company had sent a letter to the worker's compensation agency saying the disease was a result of "a personal neglect of his own health".
Type de source: News outlet
Résumé
Date indiquée: 30 Oct 2023
Lieu: Corée du Sud
Autre
Not Reported ( Agriculture et élevage ) - EmployerConcerné
Nombre total de personnes concernées: Chiffre inconnu
Travailleurs migrants et immigrés: ( Chiffre inconnu - Cambodge , Agriculture et élevage , Gender not reported )Enjeux
Maladie , Conditions de vie précaires/inadaptées , MortsRéponse
Response sought: Non
Mesures prises: While an autopsy found her death to have been from a complication from untreated liver cirrhosis, the government ruled her work to be work-related because the cold had accelerated her death prompted by insufficient heating. The employer was fined around USD220. Her death sparked a social movement, joined by the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU) and its affiliates, to tackle the issue of poor accommodation offered to migrant workers in Korea. Following their advocacy and campaigning, the government prohibited the use of certain types of temporary shelters as accommodation for migrant workers, such as plastic greenhouses and shipping containers. However, the fight for better living conditions continues, as employers continue to use unsuitable temporary structures by registering them as dormitories with the municipal government.
Type de source: News outlet
"Facing a labor crisis, South Korea turns to migrants. Why are they more likely to die on the job?,"
...
For decades, South Korea resisted admitting large numbers of immigrants, but a deepening labor shortage spurred by the world’s worst population collapse left it with little choice.
Roy and the other workers at his factory had been recruited through a program known as the Employment Permit System, which has become the country’s most important stopgap against the crisis. The EPS, which included 370,000 workers at the end of last year, is on track to add 120,000 more this year — up from 56,000 in 2019...
But as the migrant program ramps up recruitment, it has come under scrutiny for what critics say is failure to guarantee safe working conditions.
Government data show that foreigners made up roughly 9% of the manufacturing workforce in 2021 but accounted for 18% of its 184 accidental deaths.
The criticism has focused on the powers the program gives to employers, which makes it difficult for migrants to seek other jobs or protest unsafe working conditions.
“It essentially allows local employers to hold migrant workers hostage,” said Choi Jung-kyu, a migrant rights lawyer at the forefront of the campaign to reform the program...
... the labor ministry said in its statement that migrant workers are clustered in smaller manufacturing companies, which tend to be more dangerous, and that language barriers and a lack of experience also make them more prone to accidents...
Ansung Industrial, the company where Roy landed in early 2021, has won government accolades for its exports of equipment like backhoes and tractors...
At his workstation, fumes from the paint thinner stung his nose, mixing in with the haze of metal dust emitted by the grinding. “It always smelled,” he said. “You could feel the metal dust go down your throat.”
Roy said that early on he had asked a manager for a respirator but was given a blue fabric mask instead. He wanted to find another job but knew he was stuck at Ansung. An employer’s failure to provide proper protective equipment, while a violation of industrial safety law, is not an accepted reason for a job transfer...
Ansung sent a letter to the worker’s comp agency, known as KCOMWEL, saying all of its workers were supplied with industrial respirators and that Roy’s illness was caused by “a personal neglect of his own health.”
When reached for comment by The Times, a manager at Ansung declined to answer questions about Roy’s case. “Our only stance is that we are hoping for a quick resolution from KCOMWEL,” he said...