*Press Release *

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*

*Promotion of Asbestos Trade with Canada by Commerce Ministry & CCEA
Condemnable *

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*WHO and ILO call for elimination of asbestos of all forms including
chrysotile asbestos  *

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*Decontaminate asbestos laden buildings of Parliament, Supreme Court,
houses of legislators, personnel from armed forces, airports, railway
platforms etc*

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*

New Delhi: Public health and environmental groups demand that Cabinet
Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) should ensure that India desists from
signing the "Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement" (CEPA) with
Canada that allows the export of cancer causing Canadian asbestos to India.


 CCEA cannot defend its promotion of asbestos trade given the fact that the
WHO, the ILO, all medical health professionals, overwhelming scientific
evidence is opposed to it. Support for asbestos trade is indefensible.
There is not a single reliable study in the world that shows that asbestos
can be used safely in a controlled manner. Had that been the case some 60
countries would not have banned it.


 ToxicsWatch Alliance (TWA) appreciates the role of New Democratic Party
(NDP) of Canada, the Official Opposition party for resisting the efforts
Stephen Harper government of Conservative *party of Canada** *to eliminate
trade tariffs on exports of lethal Canadian asbestos to India. “It is a
disgrace that the Harper government has opposed the global effort to ban
this substance,” NDP said in a
release<http://www.ndp.ca/press/harper-government-plans-to-increase-asbestos-exports-to-india>dated
December 5, 2011.


 Every day, work is underway in the Canadian House of Commons to
decontaminate offices and houses of Members of Parliament that contain
asbestos. The offices are being decontaminated because asbestos is
carcinogenic and harmful to human health. In India, will members of Indian
National Congress led United Progressive Government, CCEA and Commerce
Minister, Anand Sharma reveal whether they want the asbestos roofs in their
own houses and offices to be made of carcinogenic chrysotile asbestos?


 Don Stephenson, the chief negotiator of Canada for CEPA revealed to
Canadian Parliamentary committee, "The potential impact of trade
negotiations of asbestos is that the tariff applicable to imports of
asbestos in India would be reduced. The current rate is 10% and there is a
possibility that negotiations could lead to a reduction or elimination of
this rate "on December 1, 2011.


 In India, this amounts to disregarding the notice dated July 6, 2011
issued by National Human Rights Commission that seeks report on victims of
asbestos and need for ban on chrysotile asbestos (white) asbestos. The
proposed free trade agreement between India and Canada will boost asbestos
trade and lead massive increase in deaths and diseases to the killer fibers
of Canadian asbestos.


 TWA demands that instead of reducing or eliminating tariffs on asbestos
from Canada as is proposed in the CEPA negotiations, CCEA and Commerce
Ministry should safeguard present and future generation of Indian citizens,
consumers, workers and their families by banning trade in asbestos in every
form.


 TWA has been writing to Commerce Ministry since the inception of these
free trade agreement negotiations that commenced in November 2010, warning
it against continued asbestos trade with Canada. The CEPA is to be
finalized by 2013. Unmindful of incurable asbestos related diseases, Canada
exported 70 000 tonnes of asbestos to India in 2010 alone.


 India rightly disassociated itself from Canada in June, 2011 who derailed
the international consensus that categorizes chrysotile asbestos as a
hazardous substance under the UN’s Rotterdam Convention on the Prior
Informed Consent Procedure for Certain Hazardous Chemicals and Pesticides
in International Trade. Thus, India has taken a position that it considers
chrysotile asbestos as a hazardous substance. Now it should take the next
logical step and phase out asbestos use. In an explicit case of hypocrisy
and double standard, Canada categorizes chrysotile asbestos as a hazardous
substance in Canada but promotes it as a harmless substance to India.


 In a related development, on December 5, 2011 members of the public in
Ottawa, Canada heard why Ms Michaela Keyserlingk thinks that the production
and use of asbestos should be banned in Canada. Michaela's husband Robert
died 2 years ago from asbestos cancer; since then, Michaela has been
campaigning to raise awareness of the asbestos hazard. The event was
organized by the Reverend Michel Dubord at St. John's Anglican Church in
Ottawa. Six weeks ago, the Anglican Diocese of Ottawa passed a motion
denouncing the Canadian Government's policy of exporting asbestos. TWA
appreciates the efforts of Michaela and the Church.


 According to WHO estimates, more than 107 000 people die each year from
asbestos-related lung cancer, mesothelioma and asbestosis resulting from
occupational exposure. About 125 million people in the world are exposed to
asbestos at the workplace.


 The World Health Assembly Resolution 58.22 on cancer prevention urges
Member States to pay special attention to cancers for which avoidable
exposure is a factor, including exposure to chemicals at the workplace.
With Resolution 60.26, the World Health Assembly requested WHO to carry out
a global campaign for the elimination of asbestos-related diseases
"…bearing in mind a differentiated approach to regulating its various forms
- in line with the relevant international legal instruments and the latest
evidence for effective interventions…".


 Eliminating asbestos-related diseases is particularly targeted at
countries still using chrysotile asbestos, in addition to assistance in
relation to exposures arising from historical use of all forms of asbestos.


 WHO, in collaboration with the International Labour Organization (ILO) and
with other intergovernmental organizations and civil society, -works with
countries towards elimination of asbestos-related diseases in the following
strategic directions:

•           by recognizing that the most efficient way to eliminate
asbestos-related diseases is to stop the use of all types of asbestos;

•           by providing information about solutions for replacing asbestos
with safer substitutes and developing economic and technological mechanisms
to stimulate its replacement;

•           by taking measures to prevent exposure to asbestos in place and
during asbestos removal (abatement); and

•           by improving early diagnosis, treatment, social and medical
rehabilitation of asbestos-related diseases and to establish registries of
people with past and/or current exposures to asbestos.


 The resolution of the 95th Session of the International Labour Conference
of ILO reads:

•           Considering that all forms of asbestos, including chrysotile,
are classified as known human carcinogens by the International Agency for
Research on Cancer, a classification restated by the International
Programme on Chemical Safety (a joint Programme of the International Labour
Organization, the World Health Organization and the United Nations
Environment Programme),

•           Alarmed that an estimated 100,000 workers die every year from
diseases caused by exposure to asbestos,

•           Deeply concerned that workers continue to face serious risks
from asbestos exposure, particularly in asbestos removal, demolition,
building maintenance, ship-breaking and waste handling activities,

•           Noting that it has taken three decades of efforts and the
emergence of suitable alternatives for a comprehensive ban on the
manufacturing and use of asbestos and asbestos-containing products to be
adopted in a number of countries,

•           Further noting that the objective of the Promotional Framework
for Occupational Safety and Health Convention 2006 is to prevent
occupational injuries, diseases and deaths,

1. Resolves that: (a) the elimination of the future use of asbestos and the
identification and proper management of asbestos currently in place are the
most effective means to protect workers from asbestos exposure and to
prevent future asbestos-related diseases and deaths; and (b) the Asbestos
Convention, 1986 (No. 162), should not be used to provide a justification
for, or endorsement of, the continued use of asbestos.

2. Requests the Governing Body to direct the International Labour Office
to: (a) continue to encourage member States to ratify and give effect to
the provisions of the Asbestos Convention, 1986 (No. 162), and the
Occupational Cancer Convention, 1974 (No. 139); (b) promote the elimination
of future use of all forms of asbestos and asbestos containing materials in
all member States; (c) promote the identification and proper management of
all forms of asbestos currently in place; (d) encourage and assist member
States to include measures in their national programmes on occupational
safety and health to protect workers from exposure to asbestos; and (e)
transmit this resolution to all member States.


 Taking cognizance of the above mentioned facts and resolutions, TWA
demands that the Commerce Ministry and CCEA should: (a) stop asbestos trade
in CEPA in particular and ban manufacturing, use and import of asbestos and
trade in asbestos products in general; (b) assist workers affected by
diseases caused by asbestos fibers by developing a Just Transition Plan;
(c) introduce measures dedicated to affected workers and their families to
assure them of a decent standard of living; (e) support and compensate
citizens and consumers who are victims of asbestos exposure through legal
remedy, (f) decontaminate asbestos laden buildings of Parliament, Supreme
Court and the houses of legislators, officials, personnel from armed
forces, airports, railway platforms etc and (g) float global tender
inviting companies who have competence, skill and capacity to remove
asbestos from existing buildings.


 India should act urgently to stop import of human misery on a monumental
scale. Asbestos trade is morally and ethically reprehensible.


 *For Details*: Gopal Krishna, ToxicsWatch Alliance (TWA), New Delhi, Mb:
9818089660, E-mail: [email protected] Web: toxicswatch.blogspot.com

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