Two workers of a Chinese factory, WEMPCO, Magboro, Ogun State, have
accused the company of not compensating them after factory accidents
which led to permanent disability.
The workers, Augustine Okolocha and Goddey Lucky, said they were both
working in the nail unit of the factory when their fingers were chopped
off by the machines at different times, adding that the management left
them to their fate.
While 57-year-old Okolocha said he lost two fingers in February 2017, Lucky said he lost three fingers since April 2014.
Okolocha, an indigene of Ukwachi, in the Ndokwa East Local Government
Area of Delta State, said he was producing plates of iron when the
machine cut off his fingers.
The father of four, who worked with the company for more than five
years, said he was taken to the gate on a forklift before the manager
called an ambulance to take him to a hospital in the area.
After spending about a month at the hospital, he said he resumed his
duties and was posted to the security unit due to his condition.
“Every worker has a card with a lifespan of two weeks. The card is
marked by our boss, Master Fu, and we get paid based on the number of
days we work out of the two weeks in the card. On a daily basis, I was
getting paid N1,027.
“When I was discharged and returned to the
company, I was posted on night duties to the security post. I worked
three days in a week. I resumed 7pm and closed 7am.
“There was a time we had a two day public holiday and I was paid N5,000,” he added.
Okolocha said despite the low pay and his condition, his boss complained that he was cheating the company.
“He said the money I was getting was too much. On June 22, 2017, after
marking my card, he said I should go back home and resume on June 28. I
obeyed and resumed on that day as he instructed.
“On June 29, he said
I should go back home and resume the following Monday to the factory. I
refused and wondered why he would expect me to still enter the factory
in my condition,” he added.
Okolocha berated the company for the treatment meted out to him and
accused the Chinese managers of hiding safety equipment from workers.
“Before now, anytime I am off duty, I would go out for part-time jobs
and make money; but now, I am useless and cannot do anything. I want
Nigerians to save our youths. There are youths in the company working
despite losing their legs and hands. I want my compensation,” he said.
Twenty-five-year-old Lucky, who is an indigene of Sapele, Delta State,
said he had barely spent a year in the company when he lost three
fingers.
He said although the incident happened since April 8, 2014, the company had not compensated him for his disability.
He said, “I was working on a machine when my hand was drawn in and by
the time I forcefully removed it, three fingers had been lost. I was
taken to a hospital where I was treated.
“After my discharge, the
company paid me N6,000 every two weeks. But I have told them that I
don’t want the payment anymore because it is too small. I have asked
them to give me a payoff, but they are saying the insurance company
would pay but there was delay with some signings. How long will I wait?
It is over three years and nothing is happening.”
The manager of the company, identified only as Gani, said WEMPCO was making efforts to compensate the victims.
He said,
“There is nobody that has an injury that is abandoned in the company.
If you have been treated and discharged from the hospital, can you say
you were abandoned? And meanwhile, we would have reported the accident
to the insurance company. The only issue is that getting insurance
claims could take time.
“Okolocha has his part of the blame. He had resumed and worked for two
months when he suddenly wanted to be allowed to stay back at home and be
getting paid while doing nothing. Is it that easy? If the request was
before resumption, it would have been a different thing.
“He didn’t
inform me or anybody when he abandoned his duty and went away. It was
when he didn’t receive payment for two weeks that he came to complain to
me that his card was not signed. I told him that he had resumed work
and was posted to security unit for ease. After he was redeployed and he
told me, I pleaded with the boss to allow him to remain in the security
unit because of his condition and the man agreed. But he just decided
to go away.
“Most workers are ignorant of certain things. When
accidents like these happen, they expect to be paid huge sums of money
immediately, not knowing that everything has procedures.”
He promised to go to the company’s head office in Lagos over the insurance claims of the workers.
Punch