The coalfields here are run by Central Coalfields Ltd., a subsidiary of Indian state-run giant Coal India Ltd. The several thousand miners here must contend with air filled with coal dust. Some say they have developed asthma and other respiratory problems. Others say the environment exacerbates existing health conditions.
Jugal Munda, a 30-year-old who already suffers from tuberculosis, would prefer not to be breathing in ash on a daily basis, but says he has no choice because he has a family of three to support. Mr. Munda earns around $500 a month helping to load coal into dump trucks. “I have to keep working until I die, and hopefully my wife will then get a job on compensatory grounds,” he says. screw feeder
Ajay Pal, 50 years old, has a similar job and says he suffers from asthma. He has a family of five to support and works in area mines. He says he feels like he is “dying a slow death.”
Workers say they also suffer from serious eye problems because of coal dust.
The main reason for all these ailments, according to S.N. Sahadev, a senior worker at the coalfields, is that Coal India and its contractors aren’t following protocols. “After coal is taken out from the open cast mines, water should be sprayed to prevent flying of coal dust,” he says, and trucks are to be covered with tarpaulin sheets. Those rules aren’t followed, he said.
The general manager of the Central Coalfields mines, B.R. Reddy, declined to comment.
Etwaria Oran, a worker at the mines, complains that there aren’t proper medical facilities available in the makeshift hospitals operated at the project by Central Coalfields. A doctor on Central Coalfields’ staff, who declined to be named, acknowledged that the medical facilities are far from satisfactory. Lack of equipment and medicines are preventing proper treatment, he said.magnetic separator
There’s another danger lurking here at the North Karanpura mines: the threat from Maoist militants who are fighting against major industrial and mining projects that they allege are stealing wealth from native tribal populations. They are part of a movement in several Indian states.
The drive to North Karanpura from Ranchi, Jharkhand’s state capital, is perilous, as armed Maoists have camps in the dense forests on both sides of the highway. On a recent visit, the driver refused to stop the car to allow a bathroom break, saying, “It is too risky and one can be kidnapped.”
Maoists have carried out attacks on mines in the region, setting trucks and bulldozers ablaze and threatening the lives of workers. They call general strikes, forcing mines to shut down. Last year alone, the mines here shut down five times. They extort contractors for money to guarantee their safety. Workers say they constantly feel under siege.
mobile combined crusher “We have to bear the brunt as we stay here and get no protection from the police,” said Sonu Pandey, a local subcontractor whose workers do odd-jobs like loading coal into trucks.
Sunil Singh, a coal trader from Ranchi who visits North Karanpura regularly, said big contractors can afford to buy protection by paying off the Maoists, but small contractors can’t.
Coal India officials say these types of problems help explain why India is lagging far behind in coal production compared to its surging energy demand.
“Imagine a scenario where industry in India comes to a standstill because of coal shortage,” said one Coal India engineer, who declined to be named. “There will be a shortage of at least 200 million tons in 2013-14 unless the country goes for heavy imports.”
没有评论:
发表评论