HRCP condemns and mourns over 20 deaths in Lahore, criticizes the non-existence of regulatory system
Wednesday, February 8th, 2012 8:27:14 by Fayyaz YaseenHRCP condemns and mourns over 20 deaths in Lahore, criticizes the non-existence of regulatory system
Lahore: (Wednesday, February 8, 2012) The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) has expressed alarm and incredulity at the shoddy state of affairs that led to the tragic death of nearly two dozen
people in Lahore when a boiler explosion reportedly brought down a three-storey ‘pharmaceutical laboratory’.
In a statement on Wednesday, the Commission said: “Our heart goes out to the families of the poor workers killed in the collapse of a so-called pharmaceutical laboratory building in Lahore on Monday. The disaster has exposed the
utter non-existence of any regulatory system, which is as horrific as it is incredible.
We now learn that the factory was operating without a licence and in a residential area, that most of the workers were women and very young children employed in clearly exploitative conditions, that the establishment had not been
assessed for environmental impact and the premises had not been inspected because the provincial government have abolished labour inspectors’ visits to factories since 2002.
The banning of labour inspection is a travesty that amounts to the government’s acquiescence into industrialists’ greedy operations above all else. How such an indefensible policy continues to prevail says something about the persuasive
power of big business.
“If such appalling exploitation and illegalities go on unnoticed and unchecked in the country’s second largest city, it should not be too difficult for anyone, including the rulers, to imagine how bad things must be in places that
are not quite so close to the seat of government or are not as well covered by the media.
Those in power must realise that the people have entirely reasonable and exceedingly diminishing expectations of the government safeguarding their interest. They must preempt such tragedies rather than reacting with posthumous
compensation packages and rhetoric.
There is plenty of blame to go around and fixing such a broken system would take some doing. For the workers at the factory in Lahore it is too late but for the sake of countless others who continue to work in similar and worse
conditions, it is hoped and demanded that the government shows some imagination and spine to put a stop to the policies that make a mockery of the people’s rights and precipitate such disasters.”
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