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: South Africa
South African asbestos victims win compensation, but claim
halved
By Neil Hodge
9 January 2002
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A four-year legal battle to call a UK company to account for
its asbestos mining practices in South Africa three decades ago
ended shortly before Christmas, with a £21 million out-of-court
settlement.
Some 7,500 South Africans who worked for or lived near the
asbestos mining and milling operation, run until 1979 by one of
its subsidiaries, were suing Cape Plc. The claimants were exposed
to dust levels up to 30 times the UK limit. It takes only one
fibre of asbestos to cause the most serious asbestos-related disease
mesothelioma and symptoms may not become evident until 40 years
after exposure to the material. The disease is almost always fatal
within two years of its appearance.
The case was the biggest group action ever brought before an
English court. The four-year fight had previously come before
both the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords twice. In 1999
the Court of Appeal ruled that the cases should be heard in South
Africa, but last year the House of Lords ruled that sending the
cases there would be a "denial of justice".
However, the claimants--300 of whom have died since the action
began--were forced to reduce their claim by £29 million
because the company was judged to be unable to pay any more. This
means that the average amount awarded to each of the 7,500 claimants
is a paltry £2,800--around one-fortieth--the lowest amount
a claimant in the UK would expect for contracting an asbestos-related
disease such as mesothelioma.
The level of payment to each claimant will broadly correspond
to the severity of the asbestos-related disease that he or she
suffers. Mesothelioma sufferers may be awarded up to £5,250;
asbestosis victims up to £3,250; pleural thickening/pleural
effusion patients up to £1,600 and people with pleural plaques
a maximum of just £700.
The agreement, arrived at with the help of the South African
government and the premiers of the Northern Cape and Northern
Province, is still provisional and depends on the company's ability
to raise the funds. The first £11 million is to be paid
by June 30 this year through a trust fund, with the balance to
be paid at the rate of £1 million over the following 10
years. Cape will also pay £2.5 million towards the claimants'
legal aid costs.
The settlement is essentially favourable to Cape Plc. In return,
the South African government will have to undertake not to fund
future legal claims against the company and not to pursue it for
any costs related to the rehabilitation of former mines and plants.
The company also resisted any acknowledgement of liability for
the respiratory diseases prevalent among its former miners. The
company's press statement insisted that providing compensation
was "subject to the satisfaction of certain conditions, and
without admission of liability".
Given the extraordinary difficulties that claimants have had
to overcome to receive a compensation payment, the legal costs
involved, the financial state of the company and the lack of government
help, recourse through the courts will be limited to a persistent
minority.
"It is clear that if the case went to trial and Cape lost
they would go into liquidation. What we've done is achieve the
best we could in the circumstances," said Richard Meeran
of law firm Leigh, Day & Co, which acts for many of the claimants.
"I don't pretend that this is some kind of triumph but I
think it will constitute some sort of justice for the claimants.
The company has been held to account and it's an important deterrent.
It's not a victory but if you look at where we started a few years
ago, when everyone told us we were wasting our time, then it's
a good result," he added.
Cape closed its UK asbestos plant in 1968 due to the high incidence
of asbestos-related diseases. The company has settled compensation
claims by hundreds of its former UK employees out of court without
challenging liability at trial, but it has aggressively defended
and prolonged the litigation brought by its former South African
workers. "To date, Cape has settled UK cases for compensation
but has used every legal loophole to shirk responsibility for
the thousands of South African victims," said Clare Riches
of the pressure group Action for South Africa, the successor to
the Anti Apartheid Movement.
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