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Labor groups launch email campaign on asbestos ban
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dtuvera  
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 More options Jan 27 2010, 9:10 am
From: dtuvera <dtuv...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 27 Jan 2010 22:10:55 +0800
Local: Wed, Jan 27 2010 9:10 am
Subject: Labor groups launch email campaign on asbestos ban

*
Urge the passage of Senate Bill 741 banning asbestos

Manila, Philippines (27 January 2010) -- With the end of the official
session of the 14th Congress on February 5, 2010 fast approaching, the Trade
Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP), the Associated Labor Unions (ALU)
and the Building and Woodworkers International (BWI) launched an email
campaign urging the Senate to pass Senate Bill 741 banning asbestos.

The email campaign calls on the Senate Committee on Trade and Commerce to
integrate workers concerns in the bill filed by Senator Miriam Defensor
Santiago to minimize the risks of asbestos exposure to workers, their
families and the public. The bill has been pending with the Committee since
August 29, 2007. A similar bill passed earlier in the House of
Representatives.

“Asbestos is a danger to everyone because asbestos fibers penetrate deep
into the lungs once inhaled, causing incurable and fatal asbestos-related
diseases such as asbestosis, mesothelioma and lung cancer,” says Rafael
Mapalo, TUCP deputy spokesperson. “There is no safe level of exposure and
the most effective way to protect people from asbestos exposure is to ban
the substance,” adds Mapalo.

“Workers, their families and the public are exposed to asbestos in
workplaces, buildings and materials containing asbestos,” says Gerard Seno,
ALU National Vice President. “By banning its use the government will be
protecting Filipinos from the health and safety hazards of asbestos
exposure,” adds Seno.

“A recent study by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC)
reconfirmed the cancer-causing effects of asbestos, leaving the prevailing
medical evidence against asbestos irrefutable,” shares Apolinar Tolentino,
Officer in Charge of the BWI Asia Pacific Regional Office. “The more
asbestos ban is delayed, the more workers, their families and the public are
at risk,” warns Tolentino.

Senate Bill 741 with proposed amendments seeks to minimize the risks of
asbestos exposure and lays down the framework for the early detection and
diagnosis of asbestos-related diseases.

TUCP, ALU and BWI encourage their members and their contacts and the public
nationwide to participate in the email campaign, found at
http://tinyurl.com/ban-asbestos in the TUCP website. TUCP and BWI help in
bringing in international support to the campaign.

Senders must type in their name, email address, municipality/city/province
and union or organization, may use the existing message, and must click the
Submit button at the bottom of the page. The email goes to Senator Mar Roxas
as the Committee Chair copy furnished the Senate President and members of
the Senate Committee on Trade and Commerce.

The email campaign will help push the Senate to act on the urgency of
banning asbestos. Any delay causes more exposure that will result in
contracting asbestos related diseases and deaths in the years to come. - DMT

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