Anti-Tobacco Activist Takes On Asbestos Industry

Fernand Turcotte is a veteran of the tobacco wars; he is an occupational health expert and a retired professor of at Universit Laval in Quebec. Now he is leading most of the country’s medical and scientific community against the asbestos industry and the politicians who support them.

The asbestos industry is awaiting the offer of a crucial loan to expand an asbestos mine in Asbestos, Quebec. The mine expansion could create nearly 500 jobs and secure the industry’s place in Canada for at least 30 years.

A petition signed by 50 of Canada’s top medical and scientific experts, demanding the government outlaw the mining, use or export of chrysotile asbestos has been taken by Turcotte to the government offices determining the loan. The World Health Organisation released a document last week calling for a halt to all asbestos use since, “all types of asbestos cause lung cancer, Mesothelioma, cancer of the larynx and asbestosis.

A W.H.O study estimates over 125 million people are unsafely exposed to asbestos in the workplace on a daily basis and over 100,000 people died in the last year from exposure to the fibre. Shocking death statistics, multi-million dollar lawsuits, spiralling costs to the health industry raise many questions, is it moral, political or even economic sense for Canada to continue supporting the asbestos industry.

Asbestos was used in the construction of Canada’s industry until the 1970s but now local production is largely exported to developing nations where activists fear checks on its safe use are lacking. When inhaled the fibres can scar lungs and cause disease, including cancer.

Over 100 medical experts and a selection of politicians led an anti-asbestos rally on Parliament hill In Ottawa, but Turcotte is frustrated that the mounting number of public declarations and petitions of scientific and medical institutions are having no effect on the politics.

“People in third world countries will curse the name of Canada if this (mining) continues,” said Mike Bradley, mayor of Sarnia, Ontario. Sarnia is an industrial town on the edge of Lake Huron has suffered an astonishing number of asbestos-related cancers and deaths.

Many people who have suffered as a result of exposure to asbestos are recruiting the services of an asbestos lawyer primarily for mesothelioma compensation

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