[Reader-list] Foxconn Gas Leak: Report

A. Mani a.mani.cms at gmail.com
Fri Aug 13 09:02:19 IST 2010


(From People's Democracy)


TN Govt Gives up Responsibility

 S P Rajendran



NEARLY 250 workers fell ill, experienced headache, dizziness and
nausea, and also vomited blood after inhaling an unknown toxic gas on
July 23 at a production plant belonging to a multinational company in
Tamilnadu.


This incident came to the people of Tamilnadu as a reminder of the
Bhopal tragedy.


The concerned company is Foxconn India, a mobile phone accessory
maker. It is part of the Taiwan based Foxconn Technology Group worth
1.74 billion US dollars. After Hyundai Motor India and Nokia India, it
is the third largest industrial employer in the special economic zone
(SEZ) at Sriperumpudhur near Chennai, with nearly 9,000 workers.


The company's Sunguvarchatram plant, employing 500 workers, was
reopened on July 23 after nearly nine months, on the strength of
increased orders for mobile accessories.


This particular plant is situated close to the back entrance of Nokia
India, a major MNC in this SEZ. It is to be noted that Foxconn India
has been manufacturing the mobile components mainly for the Nokia
India.


When the plant gate reopened and the workers, including women, entered
it on July 23, they began to faint and fall ill.


Immediately they were taken to a local hospital at Sriperumpudhur in
the absence of a dispensary with first aid facilities in the company
premises. However, that hospital did not have sufficient facilities
either. So some 235 workers were taken to the Sri Ramachandra Medical
College hospital at Chennai with the help of workers at Foxconn
India's main plant.


At the Sri Ramachandra Medical College hospital, some 45 workers
vomited blood and were put in the intensive care unit (ICU).


The other workers, who were sent back home after treatment, complained
of continuing sickness, vomiting and breathlessness.


This sickness is said to be a symptom of isopropyl alcohol poisoning.
Though the company said the plant did not have any gas tanks or gas
related production, workers said that the plant uses isopropyl
alcohol, a colourless inflammable chemical with strong odour, as a
cleaning agent in all the sections.


‘TOXIC’ ROLE OF PRO-DMK UNION

Even after the toxic gas incident, officials of the company refused to
shut the plant down and compelled the remaining workers to continue
work. When the workers opposed, the management of the company used the
Labour Progressive Front (LPF), the ruling DMK's trade union, to
compel the workers to continue work. Ezhilarasan, president of the LPF
in Foxconn, was found extra-vocal in denying that isopropyl poisoning
was the reason behind the workers falling sick. He acted as a puppet
of the management during this whole episode. One notes that the LPF
has got recognition from the company.


At this juncture, members of the Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU)
intervened and organised the workers in the premises, demanding safety
for their life.


Very soon after the incident, Kancheepuram district CITU secretary E
Muthukumar and other leaders reached the plant. They addressed the
workers and concretised their demands. The workers complained that
there were no safety measures in the plant. There were nearly 9,000
workers in the company but in the name of a dispensary, it had only a
small room without any facilities.


While lambasting the behaviour of the pro-DMK union in the factory,
the CITU also lashed out at the management and demanded immediate
shutdown of the plant till all safety aspects were checked and cleared
by the authorities concerned. It also demanded that all the workers
must get full salary for the period of closure. The management must
immediately open a full-fledged dispensary with five per cent beds
relative to the workforce in the company.


Next day, on July 24, CITU state general secretary A Soundararajan, E
Muthukumar and other leaders visited the workers at Sri Ramachandra
Hospital. Soundararajan released a statement there, condemning the
state government, the state’s labour ministry and the authorities of
the Pollution Control Board for not conducting regular observation of
safety measures of the industries in the SEZ. He sharply criticised
that the DMK government, which has provided all kinds of facilities
including uninterrupted power supply for the multinational companies
in the SEZ, but is not ready to implement the labour laws including
safety measures in the SEZ industries. He accused that the DMK
government is implementing the centre's neo-liberal policies in
Tamilnadu and has given up its responsibility in relation to the
safety of workers in the industries.


POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD TELLS LIES

While the CITU indicted the Foxconn India, however, the Tamilnadu
Pollution Control Board (TNPCB) gave a clean chit to the company,
saying only some of the workers had complained of nausea.


In a statement issued on July 26, the TNPCB said the workers fell sick
after inhaling a strong- odour pesticide. “Around 4 p m on July 23,
four workers had vomited and fainted. They were taken to the hospital
and sent home," it said.



The CITU vehemently condemned this false report of the TNPCB and asked
how the Pollution Control Board could issue such a statement even
after 250 workers had fallen ill and 40 of them had to be admitted to
the ICU.


After the forceful intervention of the CITU, the Tamilnadu government
had had to order on July 26 evening the closure of the plant till the
safety measures were checked.


On July 27, Tuesday, a team of district officials inspected the
assembly unit at the company's plant in Sunguvachatram where employees
had fainted. These included district revenue officer S Sivarasu who is
also the collector in-charge of Kancheepuram, public health deputy
director (Kancheepuram) S Rajasekaran, the state labour department’s
joint commissioner K Madanamaohan and the chief factories inspector S
Raghunathan. "When we inspected the site, we found there is no proper
ventilation facilities available for the staff and three of them are
not working. We asked them to provide better ventilation facilities to
employees," Raghunathan later told the media.

 However, for reasons unknown, he ruled out any possibility of a
poisonous gas having leaked. Instead, he said the lack of a proper
ventilation system and air conditioners, combined with the spray of
malathion, a pesticide, might have led to suffocation of the
employees.
_________________________________________________________________
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Addendum: Malathion cannot be the cause for the observed symptoms.
It seems the TNPCB has no knowledge of the technical facts about
malathion poisoning.




Best

A. Mani






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A. Mani
ASL, CLC,  AMS, CMS
http://www.logicamani.co.cc


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