Officials have found the body of the fifth person who went missing after the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed over a month ago.
The officials said they found the person who passed away on Wednesday. His name was Miguel Angel Luna Gonzalez, he was 49 years old and lived in Glen Burnie, Maryland.
Six workers fixing the road fell and died on March 26 because a big ship lost power and hit the bridge’s pillar. Five bodies have been found, but one worker named Jose Mynor Lopez is still missing. They were all people from Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras who moved to the United States.
Workers found one of the missing construction trucks on Wednesday and told the Maryland State Police about it, according to officials. The state police, Maryland Transportation Authority Police, and the FBI went to the place and found a dead body in a red truck. The underwater police team and the crime scene unit helped too.
“We are committed to continuing the recovery efforts, and we are aware that each person lost in this tragedy has a loving family,” said Roland Butler, Maryland State Police Superintendent. “We are asking everyone to show their support and condolences to the families during this tough time, along with our local, state, and national partners. ”
The Dali container ship has been stuck in the wreckage since it collapsed, but crews are going to lift it up and take it away so that more ships can start using Baltimore’s port again. According to a Port of Baltimore news release, officials think they will have it taken away by May 10th.
Tag: worker
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Fifth worker’s body discovered month after fall of the Baltimore bridge
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Amazon punished for ‘excessive’ worker surveillance
Amazon was punished in France for watching its workers too much. They were fined a lot of money because the way they were keeping an eye on their workers broke the law.
The CNIL said that Amazon France Logistique, which runs warehouses, collected data from workers’ handheld scanners.
Amazon was able to monitor the workers’ activities very accurately, which made them have to explain every break they took.
The CNIL said it was wrong for Amazon to keep workers’ data for 31 days.
The data protection agency in France looked into Amazon warehouses after workers complained and media reported on the working conditions.More update on this story soon.
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GTPCWU-TUC demand resignation of TOR Board of Directors
The General Transport, Petroleum, and Chemical Workers Union under the Trades Union Congress (GTPCWU-TUC) has urged the government to remove the management of the Tema Oil Refinery.
The union contends that the Board of Directors has exhibited incompetence in their actions and decisions.
They argue that the current Board of Directors (BOD) has displayed a remarkable level of ineptitude, and their continued tenure is detrimental to the credibility of the appointing authority and places an undue burden on public finances.
Furthermore, they have expressed reservations regarding the sale of the refinery to a company called Torentco Asset Management, an entity that has undergone several name changes.
“The current BOD of TOR is set up not based on competence but only on political considerations. As a result of this, they have tolerated and wasted our time over an Entity whose incorporated name started with Decimal Capital/VITOL, then changed to Baybridge Asset Management Limited, later to Torentco Asset Management Limited, and now Tema Energy and Processing Limited, within a period of 18 months.
“All the changes or evolutions of names are shrouded under the pretense of ‘a new SPV’, to cover one scandal or the other. As responsible citizens and key internal stakeholders of the refinery, who share in the President’s charge for citizenship and not spectators, we bring your attention to the latest development with this particular entity (Torentco Asset Management Limited),” the group said in a statement.
Here is the full statement below:
Ladies and gentlemen of the press, on this special 60th anniversary year of the Tema Oil Refinery, we (GTPCWU-TUC) would have wished to outline the great achievement of TOR since its Board of Directors were commissioned to secure a credible strategic partner for TOR some 18 months ago.
Interestingly, not only has the Board of directors-micro-managed by Mr. Adomako, (the BOD Chairman), Mr. Apenteng and Mrs. Sapara Grant- shown and demonstrated the highest level of incompetence, but their continuous stay in office is inimical to the integrity of the appointing authority and a drain to the public purse. The current BOD of TOR is set up not based on competence but only on political considerations.
As a result of this, they have tolerated and wasted our time over an Entity whose incorporated name started with Decimal Capital/VITOL, then changed to Baybridge Asset Management Limited, later to Torentco Asset Management Limited and now Tema Energy and Processing Limited, within a period of 18 months.
Ladies and gentlemen, all the changes or evolutions of names are shrouded under the pretense of “a new SPV”, to cover one scandal or the other. As responsible citizens and key internal stakeholders of the refinery, who share in the President charge for citizenship and not spectators, we bring your attention to the latest development with this particular entity (Torentco Asset Management Limited).
As it stands now, due to the damming findings of the due diligence report, the surrogate of Torentco wearing the clothing of TOR BOD has allowed or tolerated a new SPV by name Tema Energy and Processing Limited with shares allocation of 40% to CAD Investment Holdings, 40% to Torentco and 20% to TOR Workers Charity Trust.
Ladies and gentlemen, this mischievous attempt by these actors who also double as board of directors not only smacks a conflict of interest, and inducement of workers, but also an attempt to secretly reward some compromised workers front. Fellow Ghanaians, on the blind side of 99% of TOR workers and executive management, some few executives of TOR’s local UNICOF executives (Abu Abass Bugubie, Bright Adongo) and their cohorts (Albert Amoako Adjei, Scott Tsevia and Emmanuel Abankwah) have secured an agreement with Torentco to incorporate an entity by guarantee in order to benefit from a 20% shares in the new SPV (Tema Energy and Processing Limited) without recourse to workers and management.
In our singular position, ladies and gentlemen, if this gesture or decision ticks the prudence, ethical, and conflict of interest boxes, shouldn’t it have gone through management for a comprehensive workforce engagement and establishment of the right modalities and structures? Unless this is just a cover-up to reward this section of workers who also double as Torentco surrogates within the refinery.
Ladies and gentlemen, we are by this press release pleading with His Excellency, the President (Nana Addo Danquah Akufo Addo) to restore maturity in corporate governance at TOR’s BOD level for integrity-driven decisions. We equally, will seek to remind executive management, especially the acting MD to do the needful with all the evidence available to establish orderliness in TOR, if these BOD members, the compromised TOR-UNICOF executives and their cohorts should be made to freely walk in the refinery. Thank YOU.
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21 of my friends have died through prostitution – Sex worker reveals
38-year-old sex worker, Ama Serwaa, has disclosed that out of 24 friends who travelled to Accra to work, only three are still alive.
In a chat on Ghetto Life Story on SVTV Africa, Ama Serwaa mentioned that she came to the capital 22 years ago as a 16-year-old but only engaged in sex work two years ago.
She revealed that 23 other females who came from her hometown to work in Accra are now deceased. Speaking on the dangers of working as a prostitute, Ama Serwaa disclosed that life in the ghetto itself is a risk.
“Some offer Ghs500 to Ghs1000 and you would go because you need the money but it may be dirty money. I won’t go because 21 of us have died.
“Twenty-four of us came to work here and only three of us are left. Some were prostitutes; they had infections and died. Some were thieves, and others smoked and died from hunger,” she said.
The 38-year-old mother of one added that she left her uncle’s house due to mistreatment and has been on the streets for the past 17 years. According to Serwaa, she was knocked down by a car while selling in traffic for a few years.
“I sold pure water and worked as a bus conductor until I started sex work two years ago. My boss sacked me. I was jobless for three years until a friend introduced me to it, but I want to stop because it’s not helping,” she told DJ Nyaami.
Ama advised the youth to be cautious of friends because they can be their downfall or their salvation.