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Annual Conference 2009
The Annual ANROAV 2009 conference is going to be held in Cambodia from the 21- 24th of September 2009.
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Background
Occupational Health and Safety: Our Right and Our Lives- the fight goes
on!
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Introduction
ANROAV Annual Conference 2009
- Program
Venue:
Venue: Sunway Hotel, Phnom Penh
No. 1, Street 92, Sangkat Wat Phnom, Phnom Penh, Kingdom of Cambodia
Website : www.sunwayhotels.com
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We have 6 guests online| The Hong Kong Declaration |
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| Friday, 22 May 2009 | |
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Hong Kong Declaration towards A Complete Ban on all forms of Asbestos
April 27, 2009
The Asian Asbestos Congress 2009 (AAC) was organised jointly by the Asia Monitor Resource Centre (AMRC), International Ban Asbestos Secretariat (IBAS), Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions (HKCTU) and the Association for the Rights of Industrial Accident Victims (ARIAV) and supported by the Ban Asbestos Network Japan (BANJAN), Ban Asbestos Network Korea (BANKO), Building and Woodworkers International (BWI), International Metalworkers Federation (IMF) and the Asian Network for the Rights of Occupational Accident Victims (ANROAV).
Representatives of the International Labour Organization, the World
Health Organization and the International Commission on Occupational
Health took part in this conference. The conference was attended by
more than 200 participants from 24 countries representing the Asia Pacific,
Europe, North and South America.
Awareness is growing fast throughout
Asia of the need to stop the use of all forms of asbestos and prevent
asbestos related diseases. Grassroots action to attain these aims and
achieve fair compensation for victims and their families is spreading.
In recent years, mobilisation by asbestos victims groups has achieved
major successes in Japan and Korea, the only two countries in the region
which have banned asbestos. Working with social partners, these groups
have highlighted the existence of national epidemics, raised public
awareness of asbestos problems and lobbied governments to address a
range of social, political and scientific issues.
Despite this progress, asbestos
continues to be used in large quantities in the Asian region. Aggressive
campaigns by vested interests lead by Canada, Russia and Brazil -
asbestos producing countries - have increased industry's profits at
the expense of hazardous exposures experienced by workers
and community members. Asbestos, the largest contributor to the growing
epidemic of occupational cancer, poses a major threat to public health.
The majority of asbestos victims do not receive the medical treatment
and compensation to which they should be entitled; indeed it is the
victims who pay the price for industry's profits. The asbestos industry
continues to promote discredited propaganda which alleges that certain
forms of asbestos can be used safely under "controlled conditions."
The only "safe use of asbestos" is no use. Safer asbestos-free
alternatives exist and must be used.
A concerted effort by asbestos
victims groups, trade unions, employers' organizations, researchers,
lawyers, relevant agencies and grassroots groups is needed to stop the
use and export of the asbestos hazard to industrially developing countries
from industrialised countries like Japan or Korea where asbestos is
banned. It is urgent to disseminate information about the hazards of
asbestos to the grassroots, establish proper diagnostic infrastructure
and promote the use of safer alternatives throughout the region. Recognizing the gravity of the situation and the level of threat posed by the continued use of asbestos in Asia, the participants of the AAC urge governments, the World Health Organization, the International Labour Organization, the International Commission on Occupational Health and other international agencies and organizations to:
The AAC delegates are appalled
by the unconscionable misconduct of the Canadian government in continuing
to fund the discredited Asbestos Institute so that it can continue its
immoral propaganda and promote the export of asbestos disease to harm
people in the developing world. Recognizing the urgent need for coordinated action in Asia, a new group was launched at the conference: the Asian Ban Asbestos Network (A-BAN). The formation of A-BAN is a landmark in the Asian campaign to obtain justice for the asbestos-injured and to implement a regional asbestos ban. The group which consists mainly of asbestos victims' organizations, labour unions and environmental justice groups from 16 Asian Pacific countries will work towards strengthening the grassroots Ban Asbestos movement in Asia. |
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