Safety And Health At Work In Pakistan

  • May 2020
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S

AFETY AND

H

EALTH

AT WORK IN

P

AKISTAN

A safe and healthy work environment is the basic right of every worker. However, the global situation falls far short of this right. The International Labor Organization (ILO) estimates that more than 125 million workers are victims of occupational accidents and disease in a single year. Of these approximately 220,000 workers die and about 10 million are seriously disabled. With world population increasing, the above figures are expected to rise significantly if present conditions prevail. The situation is grim in the Third World. About 75 percent of the global workforce lives and works in Third World countries which have so many serious problems like poverty and unemployment that the status of health and safety is very low.

There are almost 820 million unemployed people in the Third World The number of occupational related illnesses and accidents is high and even then the management of safety and health is not given the same importance as given to other corporate initiatives. Profit maximization, quality certification, cost reduction etc. are always considered priority while the critical job of ensuring safety is often ignored.

SOUTH ASIA The South Asian region (Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka) is a large block in terms of population, natural resources, and gross domestic product. The work force represents more than 20 percent of the world’s working population. Despite rich natural resources countries here have slow economic growth rates. •

Under the influence of various economic institutions (World Bank, IMF, ADB) countries in the region have shed protectionist economics and started to compete for exports.



Liberalization of South Asian economies has opened their markets to global investors who import obsolete and hazardous industries as well as new technology.



Industrializations in South Asia focuses on production; health and safety attain a low priority.



Promising investors cheap labor and tax concessions, occupational health and safety authorities are bypassed in the process.

Demographic and Economic Indicators of South Asian Countries Indicators / Country

Banglades h

Population (million)

120.00

Population Growth (percent)

2.17

2.00

Labor Force (million)

51.20

Employment Distribution (percent) Agriculture

India

Nepal Pakistan 131.60

18.10

2.10

2.80

1.40

321.00

7.17

36.70

6.10

66.00

65.00

80.00

52.00

37.00

Employment Distribution (percent) Industry

12.00

12.50

3.00

19.00

23.00

Employment Distribution (percent) Service

22.00

22.50

7.00

29.00

40.00

Literary Rate (percent)

35.00

52.00

39.00

38.00

89.00

265.00 180.00

495.00

709.00

Per Capita Income (US$) 265.00 GDP Growth Rate (percent)

4.70

897.00 18.50

Sri Lanka

7.00

6.10

6.10

5.50

Growth Rate (percent) n/a Agriculture

2.40

5.40

6.70

3.30

Growth Rate (percent) 6.00 Industry

11.70

4.90

4.80

9.20

Growth Rate (percent) n/a Service

7.00

7.30

5.80

5.10

FACTORIES ACT •

The Factories Act 1948, amended 1954, 1970, 1976, 1987



The Mines Act, 1952



The Dock workers (safety, health and welfare) Act, 1986



The Plantation Labor Act, 1951



The Explosives Act, 1884



The Petroleum Act, 1972



The Pakistan Boilers Act, 1956



The Pakistan Electricity Act, 1961



The Dangerous Machines (Regulations) Act, 1983



The Pakistan Atomic Energy Act, 1975



The Radiological Protection Rules, 1972



The Manufacture, Storage and Import of Hazardous Chemicals Rules, 1989

On health this law requires employers: •

To ensure cleanliness of the workplace;



Make effective arrangement for treatment and disposal of waste and effluent;



Make suitable and effective provisions for adequate ventilation;



Maintain temperatures to secure reasonable comfort for workers;



Remove any dust or fumes from the workplace which may be injurious to workers;



Prevent overcrowding by maintaining a specific cubic area for each worker;



Provide sufficient and suitable light;



Make suitable arrangements to provide clean drinking water conveniently situated for all workers and;



Provide suitable latrines and urinals to specified standards.

The Factories Act requires employers to provide basic safety measures including: •

Securely guarding all parts of dangerous machinery;



Precautions for working on machinery;



Emergency devices for cutting off power;



Maintain hoists and lifts;



Lifting machines, chains, ropes, and other lifting tackle must be maintained in good condition;



Test pressurized vessels regularly;



Ensure walking surfaces are of sound construction;



Provide protective equipment;



Measures to remove gas and dust before entering confined places;



Measures to prevent fires.

The Factories Act also binds the employer to maintain up-to-date health records of workers, and to appoint a person experienced in handling hazardous substances to supervise handling, and provide protective measures and regular medical examinations. The Chief Factory Inspector of the Factory Inspectorate enforces The Factories Act, But a major problem is poor enforcement of the law

This law specifies: •

Minimum age of employment is 18



One day of rest per week



Limited working hours



No underground work for women



Provision of clean water and medical facilities



Constitution of tripartite committees



No unsafe mines



Right of inspectors to survey safety and health



Emergency plans



Notification of occupational diseases

In any case the factories Act does not cover the vast majority of workers because they work in the informal sector where accidents are not reported at all. This invalidates government statistics.

Occupational Accidents: The WHO estimates that over half the world’s

occupational accidents occur in the Asia-Pacific region. Occupational accidents are grossly under-reported in Pakistan. Even so official figures in 2004 showed 23 injuries per 1,000 factory workers. This compares with 4 injuries per 1,000 workers in Japan in 2004, and 10 injuries per 1,000 in Singapore.

Occupational Disease: The Factories Act requires notification of occupational diseases to the government, but they are hardly reported, allowing official statistics to compare well with industrialized countries. However independent studies report the existence of many occupational diseases, most notably respiratory diseases due to dust. Agriculture is India’s largest employer. Workers are exposed to a wide variety of dust in its fields and factories.

1. The most common disease is bysinossis caused by cotton dust in the textile industry. 2. Asthma and allergies are common among workers in grain and tea production. Chronic lung diseases such as silicosis and pneumoconiosis are due to mineral dust. 3. Heavy metal poisoning especially lead, chromium, pesticide and other chemical poisoning are quite common. 4. Deafness, largely undiagnosed and unreported, is very common in industries like engineering, heavy machinery, textile and manufacturing. 5. Few doctors are able to diagnose occupational disease. Silicosis and bysinossis are often diagnosed as tuberculosis. Doctors are not trained in occupational disease. Few doctors are able to diagnose occupational disease. Silicosis and bysinossis are often diagnosed as tuberculosis. Doctors are not trained in occupational disease. Due largely to poverty workers continue to work even when sick or injured.

Voluntary Organizations: Since most Pakistani workers are unorganized, voluntary organizations play a vital role in reaching and highlighting their problems.

However over the last decade the voluntary sector has generated awareness about health and safety. In Pakistan NGOs working on labor rights and occupational health and safety have deciphered technical jargon and try to make ordinary workers understand that they can handle their own issues with a bit of training and become less dependent on experts who are not always approachable or available. CONCLUSION: ➢ Occupational health and safety cannot be isolated from other problems like wages or job security. The key job is to make workers aware of the importance of occupational hazards. Trade unions are reluctant to organize on occupational health and safety, mostly due to ignorance and lack of awareness. ➢ It is unlikely that things will improve unless workers participate in the process. Even though the Factories Act specifies worker participation in safety management and safety committee membership, such committees is largely a paper exercise. ➢ It is almost certain that a worker on the shop floor knows about an hazard long before anyone else including the ‘experts’. Thus, his involvement in health and safety matters is essential.

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