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European firms ‘profiting’ at expense of ship-breaking workers in Bangladesh

Workers told Human Rights Watch they used their socks as gloves to avoid burns while cutting through molten steel

By: Eastern Eye

MARITIME companies in Europe are ditching their old ships for scrap on Bangladeshi beaches in dangerous conditions that have killed those working on them, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said last Thursday (28).

Bangladesh’s southeastern Sitakunda beaches have emerged as one of the world’s largest shipbreaking yards. It has fuelled the south Asian country’s booming construction industry and its need for cheap sources of steel.

European firms are among the shipping companies to have sent 520 vessels to the site since 2020, where thousands of workers take apart ships without protective gear.

“Companies scrapping ships in Bangladesh’s dangerous and polluting yards are making a profit at the expense of Bangladeshi lives and the environment,” said HRW researcher Julia Bleckner. “Shipping companies should stop using loopholes in international regulations and take responsibility for safely and responsibly managing their waste.”

Workers told HRW they used their socks as gloves to avoid burns while cutting through molten steel. They covered their mouths with shirts to avoid inhaling toxic fumes, and carried chunks of steel barefoot, they added.

“Workers described injuries from falling chunks of steel or being trapped inside a ship when it caught fire or pipes exploded,” HRW said in its report, published jointly with Belgian-based NGO Shipbreaking Platform.

At least 62 workers have been killed by accidents in Sitakunda’s shipbreaking yards since 2019, the Bangladeshi environmental group Young Power in Social Action has said.

Two workers died in recent days in separate incidents after falling from partially dismantled ships, police told AFP.

The Bangladesh Ship Breakers Association (BSBA), which represents yard owners, said its members had moved to upgrade safety. It came ahead of a new international convention on safe and environmentally sound scrapping, due to enter into force in 2025.

“We are turning our shipbreaking yards into green yards even though it is expensive,” BSBA president Mohammad Abu Taher said. “We are working on it. We supply protective equipment to workers.”

But Fazlul Kabir Mintu, coordinator for the Danish-funded Occupational Safety and Security Information Center, said yard owners operated in a “climate of impunity” because of their outsized influence in local politics.

“There is little or no attention to worker safety in dozens of yards,” he said.

Many ships that were sent to Sitakunda contained asbestos, said Ripon Chowdhury, executive director of the OSHE Foundation charity that works with shipbreaking labourers.

Asbestos is associated with lung cancer and other life-threatening diseases, but Chowdhury said workers were forced to mop it up with their bare hands.

He added that his organisation had studied 110 shipbreaking workers for exposure to the toxic substance, finding that 33 had tested positive. “All 33 workers were victims of varying degrees of lung damage,” he said.

“Of the victims, three have died, while others are living in misery.” (AFP)

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