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The Korea Herald
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THE INVESTOR
December 25, 2024

Market Now

Deaths from safety accidents down after new industrial law

  • PUBLISHED :March 02, 2022 - 09:58
  • UPDATED :March 02, 2022 - 09:58
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(Yonhap)

The number of deaths at workplaces due to safety accidents has fallen compared to a year ago after the country enforced a strengthened industrial safety act, according to government data.

Labor Ministry data showed that from Jan. 27 to Feb. 26, a total of 42 people died from 35 fatal industrial safety accidents, compared to 52 deaths from 52 accidents that occurred over the same period last year.

In the one-month period, 18 workers in the manufacturing industry lost their lives, followed by 15 workers in the construction and nine from other sectors.

The number of safety accidents at companies with more than 50 employees also decreased, from 20 deaths to 15 over the same period this year.

Other government data showed a stark difference between the number of deaths before and after the law was introduced.

In the final quarter of last year, the number of accident fatalities involving the country’s large-sized construction firms more than doubled. Labor Ministry data showed that a total of 17 deaths occurred at construction sites, compared to seven deaths that took place in the fourth quarter of 2020. 

KCC E&C, Kukdong E&C, and Sambu Engineering recorded the highest deaths at two each. Eleven other construction firms including Samsung C&T, Hyundai E&C, Hyundai Engineering, DL ENC, Tae Young E&C, Halla E&C, and Ssangyong E&C also each saw one death from September to December last year.

The Labor Ministry, earlier this month, charged the CEO of Sampyo Industry -- which saw three deaths due to a fatal landslide accident at its quarry in Yangju, Gyeonggi Province, in January -- for breaching the law, in the first case since the new legislation came into force.

The new industrial safety law can send company executives to prison for a year or give them a fine of up to 1 billion won ($836,300) under circumstances where safety measures are deemed insufficient.

By Kim Da-sol (ddd@heraldcorp.com)

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