The Shanghai Labor and Security Bureau set up booths
around the city yesterday to remind migrant workers in the city
about their legal rights.
The bureau also reminded companies that employ
migrants that they must buy injury insurance for their employees or
they will be forced to pay compensation in the event of an accident
on the job - a law that was enacted four years ago.
The bureau refused yesterday to say how effective that
law has been, or estimate the percentage of migrants in the city
covered by insurance.
"There have always been disputes over compensation
between employees and the companies, and most of them are caused by
the companies that have not bought injury insurance for their
employees," said bureau official Zhang Yuan.
One such case was filed by the family of a migrant
worker surnamed Huang. Huang's company asked him to install a lamp
in Pudong on March 11, 2005, but Huang was killed in a car accident
on his way home. His company was ordered to compensate.
Since the law was enacted four years ago, 77,592
workplace accidents have been reported in the city, involving
44,160 migrants. Insurance covered 31,256 of those migrants,
according to the bureau, which wouldn't say how many of the other
migrants were compensated.
(Shanghai
Daily April 30, 2007)
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