A group of women workers, formerly employed by two battery factories in Huizhou, in south China's Guangdong Province, are struggling to be compensated after suffering cadmium poisoning while working.
The women all quit their jobs after being poisoned by cadmium, an extremely hazardous metal used to make some kinds of batteries.
Their employers offered them compensation, but the women rejected it as inadequate and filed a series of lawsuits.
The women initially sued for more compensation, but lost since the law does not stipulate compensation for the possibility of future illnesses.
In the latest twist, the women filed a fresh suit after three of their colleagues died of illnesses related to cadmium poisoning. Cadmium damages the lungs and kidneys and can irritate the digestive tract.
The court is yet to rule on the latest case.
Lu Ying, a lawyer representing the women, said they should have the right to receive more compensation to cover future medical costs.
She said she was confident that they would win the case. "They quit their jobs because they were afraid their health would deteriorate due to the cadmium poisoning. The local government and their employers assured them of the future responsibilities thus incurred," she said.
The women worked for two factories Xianjin Battery Factory and GP Battery Factory both of which make batteries for GP Batteries International Ltd, a Singapore-listed company.
The women quit in 2004 after the Guangdong Provincial Occupational Diseases Prevention Hospital diagnosed 177 workers at the factories had abnormally high levels of cadmium in their blood. Some of them suffered from severe aches and pains, headaches and hair loss. They received compensations ranging from 3,000 yuan (US$370) to 20,000 yuan (US$2,470).
Earlier this year, 224 former workers at GP Batteries' manufacturing plant in Huizhou filed a lawsuit seeking compensation of 250,000 yuan (US$30,830) each for cadmium poisoning. They lost that suit since the law does not cover future illnesses.
A group of 146 women filed latest suit following the deaths of three of their former workers.
"Three of our former co-workers have died from cadmium poisoning this year, and another one has given birth to a baby with blackened skin," said Liu Hongmei, one of the plaintiffs. "We need to be given compensation."
She said her boss had initially given the workers up to 15 days to decide whether to remain on the job or quit with some compensation after evidence of cadmium poisoning emerged in 2004.
"We were all frightened to death and most of us chose to quit," she said. "The so-called compensation was inadequate and we regret quitting our jobs."
(China Daily December 20, 2006)