‘After a Day’s Work, We Are Happy to Still Be Alive’

‘After a Day’s Work, We Are Happy to Still Be Alive’

Win Nay Aung Thant works from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. or 7 p.m., at a garment factory in Myanmar and is paid just enough to survive. The factory’s electrical wiring is unsafe and Win says “after a day’s work, we are happy to still be alive.”

Rowena Borja: ‘I Want to Fight for My Co-Workers’

Like many migrant workers, Filipinos seeking domestic work in other countries must pay large fees to labor brokers to get a job–a situation that leads to human trafficking, says Rowena Borja. A domestic worker in Hong Kong originally from the Philippines, Borja is working with the Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions (HKCTU) to help other domestic workers get rights on the job.

Confederation of Trade Unions of Myanmar: Dignity on the Job

Confederation of Trade Unions of Myanmar: Dignity on the Job

Workers in Myanmar are free to form unions for the first time in decades since the start of a military dictatorship. At the Coca-Cola plant in Yangon, workers are members of the Confederation of Trade Unions of Myanmar.

“We need to form more unions in our country, Myanmar,” says Ko So Ko Ko Naing, a processing technician at Coca-Cola. “Only then can we achieve a safe work environment that we all want.”

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