On
Friday, Reuters published the results of its investigation of working
conditions of the people that are dealing with the aftermath of the
nuclear incident at Fukushima. Journalists discovered a number of
individuals employed in decontamination activities were employed by
subcontractors of TEPCO, the giant utility company that owns Fukushima
nuclear power plant.
Continue after the break.
Based on police sources, those
companies are linked with the Japanese crime syndicates, the Yakuza.
People who were originally hired for "radiation measuring" found
themselves on "ground zero" of the Fukushima reactor with insufficient
protective gear and confronted with dangerously high degrees of
radiation.
TEPCO's subcontractors, around 800 firms,
often unregistered, are utilizing unskilled laborers from poor
neighborhoods of Tokyo and Osaka.
Our Source reports that
"labor brokers", since they are known in Japan, resort to "buying"
laborers by paying off their debts and then forcing them to work in
hazardous conditions until their debt to the "labor broker" is paid off.
Such "employment schemes" are commonly called "indentured servitude" and are a questionnaire of slavery that is explicitly prohibited in many civilized countries.
However,
Source reports that Japanese corporations have longstanding traditions
of employing underpaid laborers deprived of the basic rights for social
and medical protection. Lake Barrett, a former US nuclear regulator and
an advisor to Tepco, told the news headlines agency that existing
practices won't be changed for Fukushima decontamination: "There's been a
century of tradition of big Japanese companies using contractors, and
that's just the way it's in Japan. You're not going to alter that
overnight simply because you've a new job here, so I do believe you've
to adapt."
No comments:
Post a Comment