Image taken from: http://qn.quotidiano.net/2007/12/07/50903/images/67797-torino.JPG
Rome - There are 1,376 people in Italy who die each year from workplace accidents. This is sad figure that stands out from the survey Eurispes injury and mortality in the world of work in Italy. Figure that is said to Eurispes, "worse than war" and emphasizing "the ineffectiveness of legislation to protect workers." And, to mark the extent of the phenomenon, the bank compares with those of white deaths 'reports of war': the start of the second Gulf War in April 2003 to April 2007, the military coalition that lost life during military operations have been 3520, while the dead at work in Italy from 2003 to October 2006 were 5,252.
(Source: http://www.adnkronos.com/IGN/Altro/?id=1.0.1321286625)
Leave aside that the easy tears will dry just as easily tomorrow ...
meditate, rather, on the extent of these figures. Let us realize that above all, in most cases, behind each number is a human being belonging to a single-income family ... Explicit
the concept: the three workers died steelworks in Turin, for example, were the only income earners within the family.
Ergo: a life is broken and a family is on the brink of the abyss.
I should emphasize that those who choose to go on a mission in Iraq is aware of the risks taken and, due to the high risks, shall be paid a fair wage.
Then maybe we should tell our employers that from now on will have to grant their workers a choice of five-digit monthly salaries or vigorously raise the threshold of safety in the workplace ... could be a solution ... The union
Roberto Di Maulo, general secretary of Fismic, proposes to punish with imprisonment those responsible for "murder on the job" ... other plausible solution ...
conclude with the hope that it does not set any day of remembrance for these dead, since the March 8 should, hypothetically, be the day of the commemoration of dead women in a factory ... and today we commemorate the wagon with mimosas and male strippers ...
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