a
a
Weather:
No weather information available
HomeNewsProbe into workplace poisoning, farmhand’s limbs amputated

Probe into workplace poisoning, farmhand’s limbs amputated

(ANSA) – ROME, FEB 10 – An investigation has been opened into the case of an Indian farm worker who has lost both legs and an arm in hospital at Latina south of Rome after suspected poisoning due to prolonged contact with chemical products, probably without adequate safety measures, investigative sources said on Monday.
The man has been treated for the past two weeks at the cardiac intensive care unit of the Santa Maria Goretti Hospital in the Lazio city.
The 46-year-old was hospitalized due to a serious heart condition.
Doctors later discovered that the worker’s legs, an arm, his nose and spleen were affected by an autoimmune vasculitis probably caused by his immune system’s reaction to being exposed to pesticides or herbicides, without adequate protection, for as many as three days, medical sources said.
Doctors needed to amputate his legs and one arm, they explained.
Carabinieri, finance guards and police are probing the case and trying to determine which farm employed the Indian national, who does not speak Italian.
Social services are trying to track down his family of origin.
Also at Latina, off-the-books 31-year-old farm labourer Satnam Singh bled out last June after being dumped outside his hut with an arm severed by wrapping machinery placed beside him on a fruit picking box.
His employers were arrested for gangmastering and culpable manslaughter last month.
The arrest warrants were served following an investigation that was opened on June 17, on the day of the fatal accident.
The death of the Sikh farm hand has spurred outrage at gangmastering, which is widespread in Italy, especially in the south of the country, and modern forms of slavery.
Unions, politicians and members of the Indian community staged a big demonstration calling for action following his death at Latina, a Mussolini-founded new town south of Rome that is home to thousands of migrant farm workers.
Although the number of work-related incidents decreased last year, Italy has registered an increase in fatal workplace accidents.
In its annual preliminary report issued last week, INAIL said that it received 414,853 reports of work-related accidents between January and December 2024, down by 1.9% from the 422,880 registered over the same period in 2023, based on provisional data.
However, the national labour accidents and occupational illness agency said the number of fatal work-related accidents had increased to 797 in 2024 compared to the 790 recorded in 2023.
The increase in work-related deaths was mainly recorded in the industrial sector and in services , up to 669 from 686, while those in agriculture dropped from 107 to 102.
Overall, the highest number of fatalities on the job were registered in the construction sector with 156 cases, transport and warehouse storage with 111 cases, manufacturing with 101 cases, trade with 58, rental and business support services with 38, INAIL said. (ANSA).
Read article…
No comments

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.

Translate »