Uruguay
Simón and the Bear
Bimbo admits responsibility in
worker’s death
and pays dollars 160,000 in
damages
The Mexican
transnational corporation
Bimbo
was forced to admit its responsibility in the death of the 25-year-old Uruguayan
worker Simón Santana,
which occurred while the young man was on duty. As a result,
Bimbo
has agreed to pay the family US$ 160,000 in compensatory damages, the highest
sum ever paid in Uruguay
in a
labor action.
At the initial
hearing in the civil proceeding, held on Oct. 23, 2008, the company had offered
the family the insignificant sum of Uruguayan pesos 8,224.50 (some 330 dollars
at the Oct. 2008 exchange rate), as sole compensation for unpaid wages, general
and special damages and loss of income.
The terrible
death of Simón Santana
exposed the conduct and policies of transnational corporations in developing
countries, where they set up shop to take advantage of the cheap labor while
disregarding even the most basic labor safety regulations, as denounced by the
International Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco
and Allied Workers’ Associations (IUF).
Bimbo’s
responsibility was proven in an action brought in the First Instance Court in
Labor Matters of the Fifth Term, heard by Judge
María Rosa Silva Rienzo
and backed by considerable evidence gathered by the Police and the General
Inspection Office of the Ministry of Labor.
Bimbo
settled in the first conciliatory hearing.
A young man called Simón
Simón
(named after Simón Riquelo, who became a symbol of the disappeared after he was
snatched as a baby during the military dictatorship that ruled Uruguay in the
1970s and 1980s) was killed in a work accident on Sept. 3, 2008, while cleaning
a cooling machine in the industrial plant of
Panificadora Bimbo del Uruguay SA,
located in the outskirts of Montevideo, where he had started working earlier
that year.
The young man
was performing his tasks unsupervised, as no foreman had been appointed to the
area he was working in, and wearing no safety gear. As he cleaned the machine,
his clothes were snagged by the moving gears of the machinery, which had no
protective guards. He was pulled into the machine, and, since he was alone, he
was caught inside the machine for more than 15 minutes, before anybody came to
rescue him. By then, it was too late. The company had cut down on personnel and
Simón
had been overburdened with a workload.
Simón
was born on Nov. 24, 1982, to a family of artists. His parents were part of a
puppeteer troupe that performed in the streets and in solidarity shows in
cooperatives, trade unions and other social groups that were active in the
mobilizations that sought to end
Uruguay’s
decade long dictatorship.
He was an
inquisitive and smart boy, who by the age of 15 had completed his technical
training in computer maintenance and assembly in Curitiba,
Brazil, where he and his mother had
been living temporarily. Despite his training, when they returned to
Uruguay
in 2007, the only work
Simón
was able to find was in cleaning services.
The deadly bear’s cave
“Simón
was really excited when he started working at
Bimbo.
I remember how he said to me, ‘It’s a factory, mom, so there’ll be many
opportunities for me to progress. I’m not going to be washing windows forever,’”
his mother, Alicia
Farías,
recalls. But only a few months after he started working there,
Simón
suffered his first work accident, cutting his hand with a heavy steel plate.
The workers at
Bimbo’s
Uruguayan subsidiary had no trade union to represent them and faced multiple
labor problems: high worker turnover due to the low wages, personnel cuts that
resulted in the overburdening of the workers who remained, violation of work
safety regulations, and the imposition of orders through fear…
The Montevideo
police report documenting the fatal accident states that the cooling machine was
turned on while it was being cleaned. The investigation by the Ministry of Labor
and Social Security found that the death was caused by technical (negligence)
and human error (overburdening of workers).
The death was
barely featured in the news, with only one television network briefly covering
it. On the night of the accident, the company quickly moved to place the guards,
protections and signs that had been missing from the deadly machine. The
following morning, the
Bimbo
delivery trucks were back on their routes as if nothing had happened.
An avoidable death
Luis Rodríguez Turrina
is the lawyer who represented the family in the action brought against the
company. After turning down the absurd compensation offer made by the Mexican
transnational corporation and following the conciliatory stage in the Ministry
of Labor, Rodríguez
Turrina
filed a suit with the labor courts claiming damages.
Sixteen months
later, Bimbo
admitted it was responsible for the death and agreed to pay US$ 16,000 by way of
settlement. While in
Uruguay
this is a historical sum for damages awarded in any such labor action, the
Mexican multinational had already been forced to pay substantial amounts in
fines for work accidents occurring in its California plants, in the
United States.
The company
-which first began operating in
Uruguay
in 2006, gradually buying up most of its competitors and establishing a virtual
monopoly in the bread and baked goods market- still has a criminal action
pending, which is now at the preliminary inquiry stage, under study by the
prosecutor, who could charge the company with criminal liability in
Simón’s
death.
“Regardless of
the outcome of the labor action, where justice was served, the State and the
working class must act as watchdogs to control employers and demand their strict
observance of all applicable safety and health regulations in order to minimize
as much as possible work accidents such as these, which are fully avoidable,”
Rodríguez Turrina
said.