China's trade unions have
urged employers to extend noon breaks for migrant workers working
on construction sites to prevent them from suffering
sunstroke.
"Migrant workers have the right to refuse to work in
high temperatures," said Liu Haihua, deputy director in charge of
labor security of the All-China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU)
on Monday.
The trade unions branches will also launch programs to
improve the working and living conditions for migrant workers and
educate them on how to prevent sunstroke.
The programs will focus on construction sites, high
temperature factories and other outdoor working sites, Liu
said.
On July 4, a female worker from a factory in Fuzhou,
capital of southeast China's Fujian Province, passed out while working. She
was sent to a hospital and was diagnosed with sunstroke.
The woman suffered hyperventilation, a fever of 41.6
degrees centigrade and low blood pressure. She died the next
morning.
Her death brought attention to workers working in high
temperatures. Some Internet users posted comments saying that
China's insufficient labor safety standards were partly to
blame.
The only legal provision concerning labor security in
high temperatures is a regulation enacted in 1960, which fails to
provide any concrete measures to protect workers working at high
temperatures.
The ACFTU says it is conducting research on how to
better protect the rights of migrant workers and improve the
regulations concerning their working and living
conditions.
In 2005, Shenzhen issued guidelines on labor security
in high temperatures, which stipulate that workers should stop
working when the temperature reaches 40 degrees centigrade and work
no more than four hours when the temperature reaches 38 degrees. It
also says that workers should stop outdoor work from noon to 3 PM
when the temperature reaches 35 degrees.
(Xinhua News Agency July 12, 2006)
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