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Monday, October 15, 2007

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Working in Italy is war

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In Italy, almost four workers die each day due to workplace-related accidents. Megan Williams reports on what -- or who -- is doing the killing.

Italian flag (Abid Katib/Getty Images)

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TEXT OF STORY

Doug Krizner: In Italy, they're known as "morti bianche" -- white deaths. People killed each day on the job. As Megan Williams reports from Rome, new research is shedding light on the dark reasons behind Italy's risky workplaces.


Megan Williams: Worse than a war. That's what one of Italy's top independent research centers is calling the high number of workplace deaths in Italy.

An average of almost 1,400 people die each year in industrial, construction and agricultural accidents. That's almost four workers a day. Between 2003 and 2006, that was more than the number of coalition troops who died in the Gulf War.

Both researchers and the Italian government are pointing their fingers at the thriving black labor market and jobs controlled by organized crime. Italy is upping the number of safety inspectors, but until it seriously tackles the black market, workers' lives will be on the line.

In Rome, I'm Megan Williams for Marketplace.

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