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Even today there are mines where children play in polluted areas.
Asbestosis
Unfortunately there is no cure for asbestosis. Doctors can only alleviate the symptoms.
A patient must avoid any contact with asbestos, and immediately refrain from smoking. The lung infection must be treated aggressively.
Asbestosis patients must avoid catching colds or influenza at all costs.
Asbestos has been mined in this country for many years. By 1910 five asbestos mines were operating in South Africa. By the 1950’s, in other parts of the world such as Britain, companies have become aware that exposure to asbestos is harmful to human health and causes disease. In South Africa this realisation was not embraced so workers continued to remain ignorant of the true dangers of asbestos.
In South Africa the problem is more acute in the Limpopo Province and Northern Cape where reports indicate that children are forever playing on asbestos polluted and contaminated grounds. South Africa must come to term with the fact that we have an asbestos industry. The challenge is to ensure that all parts of the asbestos chain, from mining to ultimately removal and waste disposal, are handled in a responsible manner to avoid pollution that could be harmful to both the environment and the people.
Looking at the policy approach, the precautionary principle is a key part of South Africa’s environmental management policy. This means that our approach to development and good environmental governance is that where any risks exists, we need to focus our energies on preventive action to counteract any possible harm that could result from such development action.
However, the overall government policy on asbestos is till in its infancy. It is against this policy background that I must announce my profound appreciation of the efforts undertaken by government departments to deal with identified sources of asbestos problem. The Department of Minerals and Energy (DME) has started to deal with the mine dumps, but the issue of secondary pollution into nearby villages still remains unresolved. It is of course unsatisfactory that the mining companies that made huge profits have simply disappeared and did not contribute to this effort.
Since 1996, the National Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Environmental Affairs and Tourism took the initiative to investigate the impacts of asbestos within South Africa. The effects of asbestos are felt throughout the country, en every province, either through having mines or mine dumps in their provinces or through the use of asbestos products by consumers in general. Ex-workers and other sufferers of asbestos related diseases contracted due to environmental exposure are also not confined to one particular region but extend beyond our borders. http://www.pmg.org.za
Answer the following questions after you have discussed the contents of the speech as a group.
1. Does the government do enough to address the dangers of asbestos?
2. What is currently being done in South Africa to combat the negative effects of asbestos?
3. What else can be done to protect the inhabitants of the country against the dangers of asbestos?
LO 3
EXPLORING ISSUES
The learner will be able to make informed decisions about social and environmental issues and problems.
We know this when the learner:
3.1 identifies challenges to societies and settlements, with a focus on the spread of diseases [identify the issue];
3.2 explains the factors that cause some people to be more at risk of disease than others [factors affecting the issue];
3.3 suggests the best way, from a range of alternatives, to reduce risks of disease [makes choices].
ACTIVITY 1
ACTIVITY 2
1.
Report 1: Employee ill due to job environment
Report 2: Deathes sue to job environment covered up
Report 3: Pollution causes health deterioration
Report 4: Mines pollute soil and rivers
2.
ACTIVITY 3
1.
2.
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