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Shipbreakers scar Bangladesh shoreline
THE LAND along the sea beach in the south-eastern coastal
Bangladeshi town of Sitakunda was once covered by trees and
greenery.
Now all that can be seen is a vast sandy stretch littered with
metal scrap from ships that are being taken apart by hundreds of
men and children. In the past three decades, this place, some 30
km to the north-east of the big port of Chittagong, has become
one of the world's largest ship-breaking centres. Some 70 to 80
big ships are dismantled every year in 55 separate places along
the 29-km long sea shore. But it is also one of the most
exploitative working places in the world, rights groups say.
Environmental activists say the ship-breaking industry is
exposing workers to serious health hazards, besides polluting the
coastal ecosystem.
From dawn to dusk, thousands of workers, many of them as young as
10 years old, are said to work in abject conditions. The workers
are exposed to physical injury from accidents. Many have died.
The entire area is strewn with broken glass, steel spikes, sharp-
edged iron sheets and piles of metal scrap. Workers can be seen
carrying heavy iron sheets on their shoulders. According to
rights groups, at least 18 to 20 workers are injured every day,
yet no medical facilities are provided by the employers. Eighteen
workers died in two explosions in may and June in an oil tanker
they were dismantling. The unofficial death toll was said to be
at least 40.
Rights groups allege that the employers hide the bodies of those
killed in accidents to avoid paying compensation. In the few
cases when compensation was paid, it was a mere $ 200 to 300,
they say.
According to some government officials who did not want to be
identified, about 400 workers have been killed in accidents at
the site in the last 21 years. About 3,000 persons have been
injured during this period. Many of the injured workers were
seriously disabled, going blind or losing a limb, following
explosions on the ships. The injured workers are usually sacked
without being given any compensation, rights groups allege. In
most cases, the mishaps have been caused by explosions due to gas
and oil residues in the ships.
Many of the ships are old oil tankers and the blasts are caused
when workers attempt to cut open such ships with flame torches.
Some of the workers told a team of visiting journalists that they
toiled for 10 to 12 hours every day. Adult workers are paid two
dollars a day, while children are paid about 60 cents, they said.
The Bangladesh environmental lawyers association (Bela) has
served legal notices on the Ministry of Environment and other
related government departments for not enforcing basic health and
environmental safeguards in Sitakunda. ``The nation has observed
with great shock and dismay that the concerned statutory bodies
showed negligence, leniency and inaction in fulfilling their
legal obligations,'' said a Bela statement.
The international environmental group, Greenpeace has also
accused the Bangladeshi government of negligence in protecting
ship-breaking industry workers. ``Foreign ship owners and
Bangladeshi ship breakers are party to the crime of sacrificing
the lives of workers for their personal profits,'' said
Greenpeace Activist Mr. Nityanand Jayaraman.
Activists say the export of ships as scrap to Bangladesh without
removing hazardous substances, is equal to waste dumping by rich
nations in poor nations. Environmental scientist Mr. Yusuf Sharif
Ahmed Khan blames the Bangladesh government for not regulating
the import of old ships for scrapping. In the 1990s, India,
Pakistan and Bangladesh have emerged as the main centres of ship-
breaking. The industry generates more than $ 500 million annually
in Bangladesh, with the government earning $ 90 million annually
in revenue from ship breakers.
``The Government will have to apply the `polluter pays' principle
and ensure that ship owners and operators are held financially
liable for the safety of the workers,'' said Mr. Khan.
- IPS/PTI
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