Injuries are unavoidable in high-risk industries, but there is a
limit to how much suffering workers should be made to shoulder.
Production itself does not kill. Ignorance of safety rules, poor
equipment, inadequate safety awareness and poor knowledge of
life-saving and emergency procedures do claim lives.
So do corruption and bureaucracy.
Coal mine explosions have claimed the lion's share of the death
toll from industrial accidents, and corruption is certainly
involved.
Thousands of local officials at various levels have been found
to have business interests in coal mining. Some of them love money
so much they have stopped caring about the lives of coal miners,
and disregard State rules on work safety.
In some cases, even when the danger of a gas explosion is
diagnosed as quite likely, miners are still driven down to
work.
The State Council has issued many documents to enhance workplace
safety. But bureaucracy prevents officials from paying due
attention.
It is in these circumstances that the State Administration of
Safe Production and Supervision (SASPS) announced on Wednesday that
it would hold top local officials responsible for workplace
safety.
An official from the administration said whatever problems there
are, they will be solved when local governors, mayors and county
magistrates exert their influence for good.
Statistics indicate the total number of workplace accidents
nationwide dropped by 10.7 per cent and the death toll by 7.1 per
cent in 2005, compared to the previous year. The decrease has been
attributed to the attention provincial governors and Party
secretaries at that level have paid to the problems of workplace
safety.
The local leader responsibility system follows from the argument
that the power in the hands of these officials is enough to deter
corrupt individuals from getting involved in coal mines, and puts
pressure on those in immediate charge of them to do something
substantial to tighten control of production safety.
It sounds, and indeed is, workable for the time being, and it is
quite understandable for the administration to adopt such a measure
in the face of the serious workplace safety situation.
But what if these local leaders, burdened with too many
responsibilities for workplace safety, environmental protection,
family planning and so on are bewildered and do not know where to
focus their attention?
So something else is needed to cut down the number of workplace
accidents.
The SASPS announced on Tuesday that more than 30,000 mines,
chemical plants, fireworks producers, construction units and
explosive factories which had not received safety certificates by
the end of last year will be shut down.
The administration has also pledged to raise safety standards in
high-risk industries this year, and eliminate those that are not
qualified.
A stricter licensing mechanism will no doubt help improve
workplace safety.
We hope the mechanism will be optimized in such a manner in the
near future that everyone in whatever position is encouraged to
perform his or her duty.
As a result, the institutional organs designed to control
workplace safety at various levels will function in a sound
manner.
(China Daily February 17, 2006)