Miners say Mittal's Kazakh Mines endangers lives

By Staff
|
Google Oneindia News

London, June 10 (UNI) Workers at L N Mittal's Kazakh mines have accused Britain's richest man of cashing in on ''slave labour'' conditions after scores have died in accidents in his mines, claims a Sunday Times report.

Coalminers working in Kazakh mines claim his firm is endangering their lives by using dangerous, outdated equipments and by cutting corners. More than 90 workers have died in the mines since 2004.

They say that conditions are worse than in Soviet times and say they would rather work in Siberian mines.

This weekend Arcelor Mittal, his company, said health and safety was a ''top priority'' and that it intended to invest 63 m Pounds enhancing safety at the mines.

The report said the accusations were made by miners and widows of some of those who have died at Mittal's mines in Kazakhstan, which he owns since 1996.

Last September, a gas explosion killed 41 in the Lenina mine. Two years earlier an explosion in the neighbouring Shakhtinskaya mine claimed 13 lives.

''We are being treated by Mittal's people as little more than slave labour,''said Sergei, a Lenina miner. ''Conditions are far worse than they were in Soviet times. The danger is so high that when I go to work I often feel I'm on a suicide mission.'' ''I lost eight close colleagues in the [2006] explosion. Since then nothing has been done to improve safety. We are all just waiting for the next accident to happen. It's so tough here that many are leaving to work in mines in Siberia.'' Other Mittal miners said that some of the machinery and equipments dated back to the 1970s. Absolutely nothing has changed since the explosion,'' said Yuri, another Lenina miner, as quoted in The Sunday Times.

Alarm systems used to detect gas levels are said to be faulty and outdated. Ventilation pipes are made of a rubber fabric that often tears and which miners stitch up by hand with metal wire. Unlike in the West, Mittal's Kazakh miners still use shovels for some work and are made to drag 260lb steel beams to shore up the mineshafts.

Arcelor Mittal said the miners' concerns were being addressed. It said it would spend 13.2m Pounds this year on modernisation. New personal gas detectors and masks are on order. The firm says its investment is already paying off: there have been no fatalities this year and injuries have dropped by 30%.

UNI

For Daily Alerts
Get Instant News Updates
Enable
x
Notification Settings X
Time Settings
Done
Clear Notification X
Do you want to clear all the notifications from your inbox?
Settings X
X