Thursday, April 20, 2017

The Dark Surface of Construction



Bangladesh, being a lower middle income country focuses on infrastructure development rapidly now-a-days. However, taking proper precaution in building these projects is crucial to ensure safety for public and workers as well during construction. A worker was killed and two others including an engineer were injured as a 36-metre-long girder weighing about 70 tonnes of the Malibagh-Mouchak-Mogbazar flyover fell on 13 March in Dhaka. Another girder collapsed during installation at the same spot few days before albeit none was hurt at that time. Almost a year ago, 25-year-old construction worker Rabbi Ahmed Emon died due to fall of iron rods from the same flyover on him in the same area. Subsequently, a High Court bench consisted of Justice Obaidul Hasan and Justice Krishna Debnath ordered the authorities concerned to take public safety measures in Moghbazar-Mouchak flyover construction last year. Earlier at least four people died and 15 were injured when a concrete girders of the under-construction flyover at Bahaddarhat in Chittagong collapsed in 2012. 

Recurrence of safety failure resulting death and fatal injury in construction sector indicate the impunity with which the employers tend to evade workplace safety laws while the toiling workmen continue to be deprived of their basic human rights including 'right to life', the number one fundamental human right, in exchange of their job. In addition repeated failure of concerned authority to bring the perpetrators into justice clearly shows their reluctance to prevent these kinds of unfortunate killing. It has been now proved that lives of the workers are cheaper even than their cheap labour.
This kind of killing can be regarded as corporate manslaughter. However, the Penal Code, 1860 and some other special piece of legislations have been enacted for protecting individual right to life and liberty from attack of other individual(s), but there is absence of proper legislation for addressing killing of people for acts of a corporate body. Corporate manslaughter is a crime which enables a corporation to be punished and censured for culpable conduct that leads to a person's death and it extends beyond compensation that might be awarded in civil litigation or any criminal prosecution of an individual for his individual act. The criminal liability of the owners of corporation is direct in such a way that he is the ultimate beneficiary of the corporation; and the ultimate decision makers of a corporation are some individuals and not the corporate personality.
In addition, one can liable the employer for strict liability in this case. In a strict liability case the plaintiff does not have to prove the general contractor or developer was negligent in the construction rather s/he has to prove the defendant was involved in the construction, a defect in the construction exists, damages were proximately caused by the defect, and the defendant caused or created the defect.
The dark surface behind this impunity is that there are no provisions in the Bangladesh Labour Act, 2006 requiring employers to stop fall from height or stopping electrocution or safe use of trenches etc. However, most of the provisions inserted in this legislation relating to worker health and safety issues are not relevant to the key issues of safety on construction sites.
Nevertheless, the Bangladesh National Building Code (BNBC), 2006 is applicable to construction sites, but even in the Code there are few provisions which deal with the safety of the workmen during construction. Part-7, chapter -1 of the Code clearly sets out the constructional responsibilities according to which the relevant authority of a particular construction site shall adopt some precautionary measures to ensure the safety of the workmen. So, the employer can never escape himself from being responsible in case of any violation of the safety provisions.
Section 1.4.1 of chapter-1, part-7 of the Code, states the general duties of the employer to the public as well as workers. According to this section, “All equipments and safeguards required for the construction work such as temporary stair, ladder, ramp, scaffold, hoist, run way, barricade, chute, lift etc shall be substantially constructed and erected so as not to create any unsafe situation for the workmen using them or the workmen and general public passing under, on or near them”. Therefore, the safety issue of the construction workers during construction is a precondition for the site authority. The site authority or the relevant employer of the workers must provide the construction workers with the safety tools prior to the introduction of the construction or demolition or even in case of handling of materials. However, employers usually want to avoid their liabilities either by claiming that the workers denied to take safety tools and failed to ensure their own safety by themselves or merely naming this as accident.
 Part-7, Chapter-3 of the Code has clarified the issue of safety of workmen during construction and with relation to this, set out the details about the different safety tools (PPE) of specified standard like goggles, gloves, safety boots, apron and hand shield having filter glass of accepted standard and suitable to the eyes of a particular worker. In relation with the health hazards of the workers during construction, this chapter describes the nature of the different health hazards that normally occur in the site during construction and at the same time specifies the specific measures to be taken to prevent such health hazards. According to this chapter, exhaust ventilation, use of protective devices, medical check up etc. are the measures to be taken by the particular employer to ensure a healthy workplace for the workers.
With relation to the safety measures against electrocution and fall from height, two most common causes of workplace fatality, the Code in its section 3.1.3 of chapter 3 of Part 7 has specified that warning signs shall be displayed where necessary to indicate hazardous areas like hi-voltage zone. In addition, according to section 3.9.2 of chapter 3 of part 7, “all cables and signal cords are required to be guarded wherever such cables and cords pass through or cross working spaces.”
Moreover, to prevent workers falling from heights, the Code in section 3.7.1 to 3.7.6 of chapter 3 of part 7 sets out the detailed requirements on the formation and use of scaffolding. According to section 3.9.2 of the same chapter, “every temporary floor openings shall either have railing of at least 900 mm height or shall be constantly attended. Every floor hole shall be guarded by either a railing with toe board or a hinged cover. Alternatively, the hole may be constantly attended or protected by a removable railing. Every stairway floor opening shall be guarded by railing at least 900 mm high on the exposed sides except at entrance to stairway. Every ladder way floor opening or platform shall be guarded by a guard railing with toe board except at entrance to opening. Every open sided floor or platform 1.2 meters or more above adjacent ground level shall be guarded by a railing on all open sides except where there is entrance to ramp, stairway or fixed ladder.
Despite that survey report of the Bangladesh Worker Safety Programme (BWSP) reveals that construction workers make up 50% of workplace victims. Among 222 workplace deaths, 103 were in the construction sector and the most common causes of all deaths were 'electrocution'(54) and 'fall from height'(38) (The Daily Star, November 20, 2008).
However, according to the BNBC the government is obliged to constitute a common building regulatory authority to monitor the whole process all over the country. With relation to the provision of setting up the BNBC Enforcement Authority, the Bangladesh Legal Aid and Services Trust (BLAST) and the Bangladesh Occupational Safety, Health and Environment Foundation (OSHE) jointly filed a writ petition in the High Court Division on January 27, 2008 to redress the failure of the government to establish an agency to enforce the Code in particular the provisions relating to worker safety issues. Unfortunately no such body does exist in the country till today!
Workers' welfare has been guaranteed in the Constitution of the Peoples' Republic of Bangladesh. Article 14 dictates that “It shall be a fundamental responsibility of the State to emancipate the toiling masses, the peasants and workers, and backward sections of the people from all forms of exploitation”. Article 15 also mentions the right to guaranteed employment at a reasonable wage and the right to social security. Additionally, the government has already formulated the National Occupational Health and Safety Policy, 2013; furthermore, Bangladesh Labour Welfare Foundation (Amendment) Act, 2013 was enacted and Bangladesh Labour Welfare Foundation Rule, 2010 was introduced. Moreover, Bangladesh Labour Rules was also in operation from 2015. The aim of the National Labour Policy of 2012 is to ensure an investment friendly atmosphere by a creating productive, exploitation free, decent, safe, and healthy workplace for active citizens and to establish workers' rights and dignity of work. These legislations and policies are all in place to ensure the rights of workers in Bangladesh. 
Trivial and shamefully inadequate amount of compensation which has been offered to the families of the dead and injured workers after these kinds of incidents exemplifies the disregard and disrespect for construction workers without whose blood the tag of lower middle income country could not have earned. The situation demands that the State as well as other stakeholders must address the rights of workers with seriousness failing which they should all be held accountable for involuntary manslaughter, which is a direct consequence of gross negligence and breaches of workplace safety laws. Accordingly, civil as well as criminal liabilities should be imposed upon them for not exercising due diligence in ensuring workplace safety.
Workers are integral parts of industry and national development. Hence an Employment Injury Insurance (EII) policy must be taken by the government to provide an immediate response in terms of compensating those directly affected by workplace accidents. Without ensuring safety in work place no development would be sustainable and the country will be defeated in achieving its development goal within the time limit.

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