@selah - thanks for bringing this up. I have always thought COTU should be the one running point on such things - instead its headed by someone who mouths off at things that really do not matter to the working people it represents.
Its just a matter of time before we "tut tut" again when workers are burnt to death after being locked up overnight in a paint factory.
Every day we see "watu wa mjengo" atop tippers and lorries. Right now I look outside my office window and there is a construction site nearby - no helmets, no gloves, no boots - when these workers get injured, woe be unto them for trying to invoke the Workmen's Compensation Act....
The officials at the Ministry of Labour are equally culpable in allowing this to happen - they get kickbacks from employers to assess the value of compensation (which is peanuts - you lose 3 fingers to a bandsaw and get 25,000 bob, etc. You lose an eye after an explosion and get 50,000 bob, etc).
When Mayor Majiwa took office, one of the first things he did was to raid various premises (factories) - I recall that was near Baba Dogo - behind Allsops - to inspect whether these premises complied to the Factories Act (sanitation, number of toilets per 20 people, canteen, fire fighting equipment, etc)...then that just fizzled out. Who wants to proffer an explanation why?
Having said that, COTU can marshal workers to strike against almost ANYTHING - including the price of Jogoo, or to boycott matatus, or even boycott products...but alas...they do not. In Kenya the tail wags the dog. We can never have a workers revolution - just political revolutions - and even in those, the people get nothing...