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Deep
in the bowels of the Balochistan coal mines, thousands of coal miners
toil under life-threatening conditions, with little or no safety
precautions in place. Bonded for their working life through contractors,
young boys of 13 work till they are 30 years old for a paltry sum
until their damaged lungs can no longer withstand the chronic exposure
to coal dust. Digging thousands of feet below ground, in a hollow
tunnel in a mountain, what are the living conditions of the coal
miners? What safety standards do they operate under? What is the
human cost of mining coal and do the workers get the monetary rewards
that they deserve?
Coal
is still a significant source of energy and is mined in many countries
including Pakistan, which has extensive coal deposits: 184 billion
tons in all the four provinces. In the NWFP, Cherat and Hangu have
the highest coal deposits, while Balochistan has the richest coal
fields in the country.
A
coal miner's life is extremely hazardous and sometimes even fatal.
He spends the best years of his life literally in the dark digging
for a living under the most adverse conditions.
A
typical day for a coal-mine worker in one of the approximately 250
coal mines in Balochistan starts at five a.m. The miner will typically
be either from Swat district in the Frontier, or from Afghanistan
and between 13 and 30 years. The age scale is very easily defined
as typically a miner starts working at 13 and can only work a maximum
of 17 years in the mine. According to a survey conducted by Dr.
Mukhtiar Zaman, Chief Executive of Abasin Foundation in NWFP and
Balochistan, the working life span of a coal miner is 17 years.
A prominent coal mine owner from Balochistan, Shiekh Abdul Aziz,
denies the charges of child labour in mining and says, "There
is no question of employing children of 13 or 14. There is no child
labour. We only employ workers from 15 years of age." The younger
ones, with their young unpolluted lungs, are sent to the deepest
part of the mine where there is even less ventilation. As the years
pass, the miner is no longer able to work that long or that deep
and by the age of 30, he is compelled by Pneumoconiosis to stop.
According to Dr. Mukhtiar Zaman, Pneumoconiosis, also known as,
coal miner's disease, is a forerunner of tuberculosis.
Pneumoconiosis
is a lung disease resulting from chronic exposure to coal dust,
its inhalation and deposition. All too often, when the miner is
forced by crippling health problems to leave work, he invariably
sends his young teenage son to replace him. According to a survey
conducted by the Abasin Foundation on 107 respondents, the miners
are aware of the health hazards, but with financial compulsions
and lack of job opportunities, mining is often the only option available.
According to one coal-mine worker, "It is unfair to say that
we have a choice whether we should send our sons to mine or not.
This is how our life is. Father is replaced by son and son by grandson."
So what are the financial rewards for risking their lives?
The average coal miner works for 15 or 16 hours a day. All of them
are daily wage workers brought to the coal mine by a contractor.
This contractor works as a middle man: on behalf of the mine owner,
he seeks young, able-bodied men or boys from poor families in Swat
and Afghanistan. These families are mostly under debt to private
money-lenders and so are more than eager to take the lump sum in
cash offered by the contractor in exchange for work. The cash payments
range from thirty to eighty thousand rupees and the recruit is expected
to work the payment off. Since the coal miner's monthly income is
1800 to 2500 rupees, the workers are mostly indebted for life to
the contractors and the mine owners. A source in the Social Security
Department of the Balochistan government, who does not wish to be
named, calls this arrangement "bonded labour" Even to
collect this meagre wage, they have to travel several miles to collect
payment. Since the services of the worker have already been bought,
he is worked so hard that more often than not, he doesn't even have
time to wash his hands before a meal.
According
to another local development worker, Arbab Nizam, "The living
conditions of coal miners can be gauged from the fact that a majority
of them have an almost permanent thick coating of coal tar on the
soles of their feet."
It is important to mention that in Balochistan hardly any locals
are involved in mining since it is considered too much of a health
hazard. Most of the workers are from the poverty-stricken Hazara
tribe of Afghanistan or from Swat. The only locals are the Pathans
of Toba Kakari but they prefer to work in the deepest sections which
are more profitable for three months at a time. No Baloch is involved
in the mining. There are coal miners who earn as much as 8,000 rupees
in the mines, but there is a price to pay for the money. Payment
in the mining business is done by the foot. The deeper one digs,
the greater the remuneration. This is the kind of excavation that
people from Toba Kakari in Balochistan are interested in. Arbab
Nizam says, "The bride price nowadays is about three hundred
thousand rupees. So young men from Toba Kakari come to the mines,
work for a few months in the deepest and most dangerous parts of
the mine, earn their bride price money and go home." Of course,
there are health costs as explained by Dr. Mukhtiar Zaman of the
Abasin Foundation as there is a greater probability of chest-related
diseases as one goes deeper.
However,
Arbab Nizam maintains that "They of course see possible death
and disease but then, simultaneously, they also see the Quaid-e-Azam
on the rupee note."
The
coal mines employ in the thousands. Just in the 250 mines in Balochistan,
there are 40,000 workers. None of these workers are provided any
medical coverage. Legally speaking, in case of an accident inside
a mine, according to the Mines Law of 1926, the mine owner is supposed
to give compensation. However, for accidents outside the mine, the
owner does not have any responsibility. According to sources both
in NWFP and Balochistan, the usual practice is that in the advent
of an accident inside the mine, the worker is carried out so the
owner can escape paying any compensation. Anyway the compensation
is not much. According to the Mines Law of 1926 the mine owner has
to pay around one hundred thousand rupees in compensation. However,
there is a difference in the coal-mine workers in Balochistan and
the NWFP. According to Dr Mukhtair Zaman, the workers in Balochistan
fare slightly better because the mines there are older and more
well established. The NWFP mines are smaller, newer and thus the
coal miners are bent upon "making hay while the sun shines
and make a quick buck." In Balochistan, according to the Abasin
survey, the miner is given slightly better health facilities. This
was corroborated by the social security official in Balochistan
who declared that in the event of an accident, the worker is usually
taken to a private clinic because the contractor has already invested
so much money in the initial payment and "does not want to
see his money wasted." The money spent on medical treatment
is, of course, put down as a further cash investment for the coal
mine worker to pay off.
Most
of the accidents in the coal mines happen because of lack of safety
precautions. According to an International Labour Organisation (ILO)
report, the fatality rate at small mines in poorer countries is
up to 90 times higher than in industrialised countries. Underground
coal mining is one of the most hazardous operations in the world
and occupational accidents occur twice as often among coal miners
than among other workers, while fatal accidents occur three times
as often. No reliable data about occupational health and safety
(OHS) are available in Pakistan because the majority of accidents
are not reported to the Labour Department.
Sardar Muhammad Ali Jogezai, another major coal mine owner of Balochistan
and head of the Sardar Usman Jogezai Coal Company, maintains that
the accident rate in Pakistan and Balochistan, where most of the
coal mining is done, is very low as compared to China. Sheikh Abdul
Aziz agrees and declares, "Our accident rates are less than
China. We have had ten fatal accidents in five years but in China
there were forty fatalities in two years."
According
to the official record of the Inspectorate of Mines of the Government
of Balochistan, there has been a decrease in the number of fatal
accidents and other accidents during the past five years. However,
the department officals, who preferred not to be named, claimed
that, "Not all these figures might be true as most of the cases
are not reported. How can the department track down every fatal
accident?" The department official also claimed that media
interest has also complicated matters. "The media is hungry
for a story. Previously, there was not so much pressure and so if
there was an accident it would be reported, compensation paid and
that would be the end of it. However, now with newspapers and local
channels etc, if the media gets wind of an accident, it makes it
into a big story. The coal mine owner is upset and when he is upset
it trickles down to the workers."
Field research has revealed that most of the workers do not even
have helmets given to them. Out of a total of 101 coal mine workers
interviewed by the Abasin survey, only 25 per cent used protective
gear while an overwhelming 75 per cent did not. It is important
to point out that protective gear translates into a helmet which
50 per cent wore, while only a small minority wore other protective
gear like a mask or gloves. Digging by hand and blasting are the
common methods used for mining. The majority of miners are involved
in cutting, drilling and transportation of coal and thus the absence
of protective gear further increase their health risks.
In
spite of modernisation and technological advancement, Pakistan's
coal mines use primitive methods of mining. Field research has revealed
that coal mine workers as young as 13 years carry a 25/30 kg sack
over a distance of 700 ft on their backs. This finding was corroborated
by a number of coal miners but they maintain that there is no other
choice as modern equipment is not available. The use of obsolete
equipment by modern standards, leads to accidents and low production
rates.
The law requires that
coal miners be protected. Mines have to be regularly inspected and
inspectors are authorised to stop hazardous excavations. In Balochistan
there is the Inspectorate of Mines whose task is to inspect and
rescue. There is a Central Mines and Rescue Station at Sinjidi near
Quetta and four training and rescue stations at Shahrag, Mach, Dukki
and Narwar each. These stations have staff that conducts rescue
operations and provides training in safety. They swing into action
when a mine caves in, burying its workers with it, or when during
excavations, poisonous gas causes the death of the workers. However,
in order to ensure that such unfortunate incidents are avoided,
this Inspectorate at its Central Office at Sinjidi, conducts a course
at the end of which a certificate, called the Mine Firdar, is issued
to each of the successful course participant. The certified Mine
Firdar is qualified to inspect the mines and stop hazardous excavations
or halt mining altogether if the inspectors feel that safety precautions
have not been taken. Each active mine is supposed to have a Mine
Firdar on site. However, the situation on the ground is another
matter. The Mine Firdar is definitely on the mine premises, but
in the words of one mine worker, " he is out smoking a cigarette
while drawing a salary from the exchequer plus a little on the side
from the mine owner to turn a blind eye." According to developmental
consultants like Zia Durrani, if the Mine Firdar enforces the safety
standards, a lot of accidents can be avoided.
In their defence, the mine owners declare that installing safety
equipments in the mines is expensive and the equipment has to be
imported from abroad. Taking this into consideration, the Mines
and Mineral Development Department in Balochistan, on the recommendation
of the International Labour Organisation, is considering establishing
a warehouse in Quetta. The project, which, according to ministry
sources, will shortly be launched, consists of the government importing
the safety equipment itself and displaying it in the warehouse where
it will be available for rent to various coal mine owners. This
promises to be a welcome step but the challenge is in the implementation.
Most of the ministers of the mining industry in Balochistan are
either coal mine owners themselves or at least major financial stakeholders
in the mining business, including the present minister, Mr. Masoud
Luni. In fact, the Minister was not available for comment and neither
was his office willing to offer information when contacted.
It is recommended that the control of hazards should begin at the
process, equipment, and plant design levels. When it is not always
practical to provide and maintain totally effective engineering
controls, appropriate individual respiratory protection equipment
should be used for respiratory protection as necessary, suggests
Dr. Muktiar Zaman.
In addition to the dangers posed by unsafe mines and hazardous excavation,
the general living conditions of the coal miners leave much to be
desired. Field research revealed that there is no sanitation facility.
Government dispensaries exist but they are usually understaffed
and ill-equipped. According to the official figures provided by
the Mine Labour Welfare Organisation of the Mine and Mineral Department,
there are three high schools, six middle schools , six primary schools,
10 dispensaries and only one hospital run by it. However, even with
this modest arrangement, the Department itself maintains that the
schools are understaffed and the medical facilities inadequate.
The Department declares that it needs "a substantial increase
in budget" to fully run these facilities. "The safest
bet is to reach the nearest private clinic," says a coal miner.
According to Mr. Mazhar Mehmood, a former government officer in
the Balochistan government, "There was a scheme some years
back by the government to construct proper accommodation for the
miners of the coal mines. However, these houses were constructed
only on paper. In real terms, they were constructed in the cities
and then sold off by the government officials of the concerned department
at a profit." Sheikh Abdul Aziz and Sardar Ali Ahmed Jogezai
maintain that coal mine owners are aware of the miners' housing
needs and that they provide the workers construction material .The
workers construct the houses themselves. However, for smaller mine
owners such an investment is not possible.
Unless the government realises the urgency and the need to improve
these facilities, the life of the coal miners will remain at risk,
while mine owners continue to reap the benefits
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