Editor’s Note:
Canada is most often seen as a gentle giant, a country of decent honourable people. It portrays itself as a desirable place to live, despite the frigid winters.
But we certainly have our darker side. On a per capita basis, we manage to injure and kill more workers annually than any other industrialized nation – this is despite very sophisticated occupational safety laws.
However, one of our greatest shames is that we are quite willing to export death to others. We are presently enjoying an excursion in
The article below highlights another of our finer moments. The shame here doesn't fall entirely on the government, either; it has the full support of a large sector of Canadians, including unions.
Paul Richard Harris,
Editor
Canadian Government defends export of asbestos to poorer nations
The Canadian government of Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper, with the acquiescence of the opposition Liberals, has played a major, if not the pivotal, role in keeping chrysotile asbestos off a United Nations list of dangerous substances—the Rotterdam Convention on the Prior Informed Consent Procedure for Certain Hazardous Chemicals and Pesticides in International Trade
The fourth meeting of the signatories to the Rotterdam Convention, held in
The Rotterdam Convention discusses the shared responsibilities of different countries in relation to international trade in hazardous chemicals, such as pesticides and industrial chemicals. At past meetings, under Liberal and Conservative governments alike, Canadian representatives worked might and main to veto the addition of chrysotile asbestos to the Informed Consent
Despite requests from various concerned parties including doctors and scientists in the days leading up to the
Thus, when chrysotile came up for discussion at the
"
In the end, only 7 or 8 countries out of 120 at the
The UN World Health Organization has identified asbestos as a human carcinogen and reports that each year there are at least 100,000 preventable asbestos-related deaths from such diseases as lung cancer and mesothelioma, a particularly severe and aggressive cancer that develops in the lining of the lungs. Exposure to the substance occurs when toxic asbestos fibers are inhaled or ingested into the body.
The government's role in protecting the carcinogen has created significant controversy, within
The CMAJ accused the government of "shameful political manipulation of science" and compared the asbestos industry to arms traders. The authors made the argument that the government was taking part in a "death-dealing charade" for its suggestion that chrysotile can be safely used in the developing world. The authors also accused the government of suppressing for six months a report from an expert panel, commissioned by Health
The editor-in-chief of the Annals of Occupational Hygiene, Dr. Trevor Ogden, who was a part of the expert panel, excoriated the Conservative government for its "secrecy" and contempt for the "best evaluation of science." "I can only attribute it," he said, "to the fact that
The CMAJ editorial revealed that the government has provided funding of more than C$19 million to the Chrysotile Institute, a Montreal-based group that lobbies to support the industry. The lobby group has significant ties with the labor bureaucracy. It is headed by Clément Godbout, ex-head of the United Steelworkers union in
A former top union bureaucrat who was ostensibly charged with protecting Canadian workers from the dangers of asbestos, Godbout unabashedly places the defense of asbestos industry profits before the health and safety of workers.
Chrysotile asbestos is widely used in building materials and accounts for some 94 percent of global asbestos production. While asbestos use in
According to Natural Resources Canada,
The CMAJ has called for a complete ban on asbestos production in
The CMAJ was attacked by the right-wing National Post, which defended the government's position and supported the mining corporations. The Post, in the best traditions of the anti-science Bush regime in the
However, not all editorials in the mainstream press have been supportive of the industry. Some editorialists have realized that the defense of a relatively small section of the mining industry pales in comparison to broader questions of "national interest." As the Ottawa Citizen stated, "Canadians need to recognize that this export revenue comes with a price, as measured in the damage to our international reputation."
In the face of overwhelming medical evidence of the harm to human health caused by asbestos, the government and union bureaucracy continue to defend the voracious profit drive of the Canadian asbestos industry. This is done with complete disregard not only for the health of Canadian workers, but for the health of workers from poorer nations across the globe.
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