The worker died in the tunnel between Zizurkil and Andoain. After leaving the concrete mixer truck, the vehicle started to move – one of the hypotheses is that he failed to put the parking brake on–, and the worker was caught against another truck.
Abdel, a 30-year-old Moroccan, was well-known among the crane workers. He worked for Tecnolevers and Mobile Cranes SL, which works for Comercial Urratz outsourcers in the High-Speed Train works which will connect the main Basque cities.
In 2012, the Basque Government gave the task of building that railway section to the Amenabar, Comsa, Isolux-Corsan and Dragados multinationals’ business alliance. It cost 180 million Euros and is facing a delay of at least two years.
According to workers’ sources, over recent days they had been working very hard putting cement inside the tunnel and 4,500 meters underground. ELA trade union members were there and explained that the moment Abdel died four mixer trucks were working in the same place.
He is the second worker to die on the High-Speed Train works in the last few days. On September 23rd to 46-year-old worker died after feeling discomfort to the heat wave that day. He, too, was also working for an outsourcing company and doing one of the hardest jobs in the works: bending and putting up iron for the shuttering.
Poor working conditions rule on the long list
Officially nine people have already died in recent years at the largest Basque public works, and other hundreds have been injured, some of them severely. As ELA trades union denounced, there could be more dead workers not on that list, but as the majority are subcontracted etorkants there is scarcely any information.
In the Zuloan book (literally, In the hole), ARGIA magazine, helped by ELA trades union, exposed labour explosionion on the High-Speed Train works. Due to pressure from the people in charge of the business, workers are operating in very poor conditions; they work for long hours, with no vacation or days -off. Consequently, there is a terrible lack of security.
This article was translated by 11itzulpenak; you can see the original in Basque here.
ARGIA is a news media funded in 1919 in Pamplona and published in Basque language. At first religious – called Zeruko Argia, "light of heaven” –, forbidden during the fascist dictatorship in Spain from 1936 on, in the 1950s and 1960s it had managed to come... [+]