http://www.scoop.it/t/asian-labour-update
After six years of campaigns and petitions over 56
occupational-disease deaths at the world’s largest chipmaker, SHARPS has
agreed to enter dialogue with Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. over the
question of compensation for the victims of the company’s blood-disorder
clusters and their families.
“Samsung’s dialogue proposal is
the result of six years of our ceaseless efforts,” said SHARPS at a
press conference January 22.
“Samsung has treated my daughter’s
leukemia as though it was a random disease,” said Hwang Sang-ki, who
lost her daughter Yumi to occupationally caused leukemia at Samsung.
“They also treated me like a heinous fraudster,” said the
58-year-old taxi driver whose lone outcry for her daughter’s untimely
death six years ago led to the formation of SHARPS.
“Because the public has been scorning Samsung, thanks to our long campaign, the company agreed to dialogue,” Hwang concluded.
Ploys
This is not the first time Samsung sought out direct dialogue with
SHARPS. And to date, all proposals have come up with ploys. In
September 2012, through its lawyers, Samsung proposed to seek
arbitration on an appeal lawsuit brought by SHARPS, on behalf of a
leukemia victim’s family, against the Korea Labor Welfare Corporation,
the South Korean government’s workers compensation entity. SHARPS
rejected the proposal because Samsung, a third party to the lawsuit,
called for dropping the lawsuit. In October 2012, Samsung leaked a
false story to the media, claiming that it has begun dialogue with
SHARPS.
It was November of last year when Samsung sent SHARPS a
written request for dialogue through a lawyer representing the company
in the appeal lawsuit. In December, SHARPS accepted the proposal. In
January 2013, Samsung complied with SHARPS’s request and confirmed
SHARPS’s acceptance in writing.
In a letter dated January 11,
Choi Wu-su, president of Samsung’s device solution unit, said the
company tapped an in-house lawyer and a human resources executive for
dialogue with SHARPS.
However, the company appears to be
continuing its maneuvering by leaking unsubstantiated leads to the
media. On January 22, the independentHankyoreh described a new
remarkable proposal under consideration at Samsung for the occupational
disease victims, citing an anonymous Samsung executive. “If necessary,
we can raise a special fund for the people who developed leukemia not
just at Samsung but also anywhere at home and abroad,” the newspaper
quoted the unnamed source as saying.
Over the past six years,
SHARPS has profiled 155 workers who contracted various forms of
leukemia, multiple sclerosis, and aplastic anemia after employment in
the South Korean electronics industry. As of June 2012, 63 of the 155
have died. The majority of the workers, 138, were employed at Samsung
Electronics, Samsung Electro-Mechanics, and Samsung SDS—the three
electronics affiliates of the Samsung Group, the country’s largest
conglomerate. Of the 63 deaths, 56 were Samsung employees.
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