Hundreds of Indonesian workers have protested for better work safety standards following an explosion at a Chinese-funded nickel processing plant that killed 18 people and injured dozens more.
About 300 workers joined Wednesday’s rally, said the chairman of the Serikat Pekerja Indonesia Sejahtera (SPIS) workers’ union, Katsaing, who goes by one name like many Indonesians.
“Our main demand is for the companies to comply with the occupational health and safety law,” he told the Reuters news agency, threatening to stage a strike if the demand was not met within three days.The blast at Morowali Industrial Park on Sulawesi Island took place early on Sunday while workers were conducting furnace repairs. Ten Indonesian and eight Chinese workers were killed.The protesting workers gave a list of 23 demands to management, according to a letter sent to police by unions representing the workers.The demands included that smelters be better maintained, health clinics be improved to deal with emergencies and Chinese workers be required to learn the Indonesian language.Sulawesi is a hub for the mineral-rich country’s production of nickel, a base metal used in electric vehicle batteries and stainless steel, and China’s growing investment in the sector has stoked unrest over pay and working conditions.Sunday’s fire was at a nickel smelter furnace owned by Indonesia Tsingshan Stainless Steel (ITSS), a unit of China’s Tsingshan Holding Group.
“The rally has no impact on operations because this is a peaceful demonstration,” Dedy told Reuters, adding that company officials were in talks with workers’ representatives.
“No production is worth a life,” the protesters shouted through loudspeakers on Wednesday.
The company had “done what they [the protesters] demanded two days ago”, Dedy told the AFP news agency, without specifying which demands had been met. “We hope this demonstration will not continue after they hear our explanation.”
Among those killed in Sunday’s blast was Muhammad Taufik, a 40-year-old welder who left behind a wife and two children.
“The family is grieving, he was the breadwinner,” Taufik’s cousin Parlin Hidayat told AFP, adding that ITSS had given the family compensation of 600 million rupiah ($30,625) after the accident.
Thirty people are still being treated in hospital for their injuries after the blast, according to police.
Indonesia’s manpower ministry will strengthen work safety laws, Deputy Minister Afriansyah Noor pledged.
Indonesia has banned exports of unprocessed nickel ore as it moves to boost domestic smelting and processing, but the sector has suffered several fatal incidents in recent years.