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‘Uphold law, protect work health rights’
Beijing—The Ministry of Health
has called for stricter enforcement of a law aimed at preventing
occupational health problems.
The call comes as the ministry has been working to guarantee health
services for the country’s large working population.
Despite the progress that has been made in enforcing the prevention law,
which took effect in May 2002 to protect workers’ health rights, many
people are still at risk of contracting occupational diseases,
Vice-Minister of Health Chen Xiaohong told a working conference in which
provincial health officials took part on Tuesday.
“Occupational health problems and work-related ailments are still taking
huge tolls, both human and economic, on China,” Chen said. Such
illnesses pose a potential threat to some 200 million Chinese people and
cause 300 billion yuan (about $40 billion) of economic losses every
year, statistics from State Administration of Work Safety (SAWS) show.
“The experience of recent years shows that (occupational diseases) are
more than a public health problem. They are an important factor
affecting stability and harmony,” Chen said.
Disagreements between stricken workers and employers have resulted in an
increasing number of public petitions and labor disputes in recent
years.
Last year, unresolved medical disputes involving occupational diseases
were the fifth most common form of public petition submitted to the
Ministry of Health, Xue Xiaolin, a division director in charge of
handling petitions at the ministry, said.
Some of the longer-running disputes have blown up into mass incidents,
which severely undermines public security, Xue told China Daily. Because
of the long duration and strong passions involved, these occasionally
violent mass incidents are getting harder to resolve, Xue said.
In the case of a violent incident in the southern boomtown of Huizhou,
Guangdong Province, police were dispatched to break up a crowd of mostly
migrant workers who had set fire to some police cars, Xue said.
“The workers involved said they wanted compensation for treatment for
work-related diseases,” Xue said. “Chinese workers have a growing sense
of their rights, but the extreme approach doesn’t work and usually
worsens the situation,” Chen said.
Local health administrations that recognize and diagnose a work-caused
health problems should strictly abide by the law and uphold people’s
rights, Chen said. “Health officials must practise self-discipline and
must not be influenced by employers who want to evade responsibility,”
Chen said.—Xinhua |