Georgia: GTUC statement on International Workers’ Memorial Day #iwmd21
USA: A proclamation from US President Joe Biden on Workers Memorial Day, 2021
America’s workers are the backbone of our economy. In every State, territory, and Tribal land, they leave their homes and families and head to work — applying their grit and skill to create, serve, and service all those things that make our world turn. Even during our Nation’s most difficult periods, American workers have always persevered, ensuring that our communities remain resilient and that our Nation stands ready to confront the unforeseen challenges of each new generation. Though workers make tremendous sacrifices — especially essential workers who selflessly serve their communities during times of crisis — none of them should have to risk injury, illness, or death in order to provide for themselves and their families. Tragically, thousands of workers are killed and millions more are hurt or fall ill every year in the workplace — incidents that are often preventable. On the 50th anniversary of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, we reflect on the workers who have tragically lost their lives or have been harmed in the workplace, and we reaffirm our commitment to ensuring that every American worker has a safe and healthy work environment.
Over the past century, labor unions have fought hard — very often successfully — to draw attention to unsafe workplace environments and organize for safer work conditions and protections from the Federal Government. In 1935, the National Labor Relations Act codified private-sector workers’ right to organize, collectively bargain, and strike. Decades later, the passage of the Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act in 1969 and the Occupational Safety and Health Act in 1970 enshrined a promise that the wanton indifference to workers’ lives — the days of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire and the Farmington Mine explosion — would no longer be tolerated. Establishing and enforcing Federal workplace safety and health standards has undoubtedly saved lives.
Despite the progress we have made cementing workplace protections into law, many workers still fear retaliation and retribution from management when they are asked to perform unsafe tasks or work in unsanitary conditions. This fear forces many workers to remain silent, putting their lives and the lives of their colleagues at risk. Alone, a single worker is often at the mercy of their boss, with little chance of rectifying an unsafe working environment created by employers who cut corners in the name of profit. United, and protected by law from intimidation and coercion from their employers, workers can collectively demand improved working conditions.
In an economic system that puts too much power in the hands of wealthy corporations and Wall Street, unions give workers a way to band together, wield their full power, and stand on equal footing with management. Unions not only protect the physical wellbeing of workers, but they also protect their financial security; they protect workers’ equity, too, helping ensure that workplaces are free from harassment and discrimination. Over the past half century, we have seen the percentage of American workers represented by unions decline dramatically. It is no surprise that during this same period, the average incomes of the bottom 90 percent of households in America have only risen by about 1 percent. The decades-long assault we’ve seen on union organizing is a direct assault on the health and incomes of American workers.
My Administration is committed to protecting the lives, rights, and livelihoods of workers and reducing workplace accidents, injuries, and fatalities. That is why I strongly encourage the Congress to pass the Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act of 2021 — and why I included the PRO Act as part of my American Jobs Plan. The decision to form a union should belong to workers alone — free from coercion, interference, or intimidation — and this important legislation would empower workers to exercise their right to organize, hold management accountable for violating the rights of their workers, and promote union elections that are free from interference from employers.
It is clear that we have not completely fulfilled our obligation to protect our Nation’s workers. We must always remain vigilant against the notion that worker endangerment is simply a necessary cost of doing business. And we must always protect the right of workers to unite and bargain for their own mutual aid or protection.
Today, we mourn each treasured life taken away on the job. Those stricken by disease and fatal injuries as they keep America running deserve a dedicated day of grateful prayer and remembrance from the living. Workers Memorial Day impels us to work for a future where no one should have to risk their life for a paycheck. When our Nation fully recovers from the challenges we face today, it will be in large part because of the sacrifice and perseverance of our workers. We commit to holding close their memory and investing in the health and safety of the colleagues they have left behind.
NOW, THEREFORE, I, JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR., President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim April 28, 2021, as Workers Memorial Day. I call upon all Americans to observe this day with appropriate service, community, and education programs and ceremonies in memory of those killed or injured due to unsafe working conditions.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this twenty-seventh day of April, in the year of our Lord two thousand twenty-one, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-fifth.
JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR.
Czech Republic: ČMKOS message on International Workers’ Memorial Day
ČMKOS message on International Workers’ Memorial Day
Podívejte se na video, ve kterém si připomínáme dnešní Mezinárodní vzpomínkový den za oběti pracovních úrazů a nemocí z povolání. Vzpomínáme na 108 lidí, kteří loni šli do práce a zpět se ke svým rodinám už nikdy nevrátili. Prosíme, buďte na sebe opatrní. #IWMD21 pic.twitter.com/VTYqxQtgUR
— ČMKOS (@odbory) April 28, 2021
Belarus: 28 April message from Belarusian Independent Trade Union – Беларускі Незалежны прафсаюз
Norway: Workers’ Memorial Day – helse og sikkerhet må inkluderes i ILOs kjernekonvensjoner
I norsk arbeidsliv er det høye krav til sikkerhet og tydelig uttalt at alle har rett til forsvarlig arbeidsmiljø. Globalt står millioner av arbeidstakere uten tilsvarende rettigheter. Unio støtter kravet om globale HMS-retningslinjer. #IWMD21
I norsk arbeidsliv er det høye krav til sikkerhet og tydelig uttalt at alle har rett til forsvarlig arbeidsmiljø. Globalt står millioner av arbeidstakere uten tilsvarende rettigheter. Unio støtter kravet om globale HMS-retningslinjer. #IWMD21 https://t.co/2VEFMN2fTJ
— Unio (@UnioNorge) April 28, 2021
Workers’ Memorial Day – helse og sikkerhet må inkluderes i ILOs kjernekonvensjoner
Global: “On #IWMD21, we remember the workers who are no longer with us” – UNI Global Union
See @CHoffmanUNI‘s full video ?https://t.co/SXyUh9uSh0 pic.twitter.com/QImXM804CF
“On #IWMD21, we remember the workers who are no longer with us.
We hold their loved ones in our thoughts.
We recognize they did not sign up to risk their lives when they worked so bravely to keep our societies running.”
See @CHoffmanUNI‘s full video ?https://t.co/SXyUh9uSh0 pic.twitter.com/QImXM804CF
— UNI Global Union (@uniglobalunion) April 28, 2021
Gibraltar FA marks International Workers’ Memorial Day
On International Workers Memorial Day we remember the dead and continue to fight for the living #IWMD21 pic.twitter.com/zreinPhfG9
On International Workers Memorial Day we remember the dead and continue to fight for the living #IWMD21 pic.twitter.com/zreinPhfG9
— Gibraltar FA (@GibraltarFA) April 28, 2021
Global: International Memorial Workers Day: Remember the dead, fight for the living – IFJ
The Covid-19 pandemic has had a brutal impact on the health of all workers around the world, especially those frontline workers most exposed to the virus, including journalists. On International Workers Memorial Day, the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) pays tribute to all media workers who have died from the virus and praises the enormous work of its affiliates, who have fought day in, day out to protect the health and safety of journalists all over the world.
Training and safety
When the global pandemic broke out, many media workers were forced to continue reporting from the front line with little or no information about the virus, proper training or equipment. Overnight, hundreds of thousands of journalists were risking their lives to continue informing people about the virus in a moment when, paradoxically, access to accurate and quality information was saving lives.
While many employers and governments ignored journalists’ status as essential workers, unions played a key role in putting journalists’ physical and psychological safety first.
The Alliance of Independent Journalists (AJI) in Indonesia, published a Safety Protocol and helped to provide all its members with safety material such as masks and hand sanitizers.Similar actions were taken by IFJ affiliates all over the world: from the ANP (Perú) and APES (El Salvador) in Latin America, to the PJS in Palestine and JUADN in Greece, taking action to provide key safety equipment and health insurances for media workers.
Training media workers to protect themselves from the virus has also been fundamental to saving lives. For example, Somalia with one of the weakest health systems in the world, has experienced high numbers of coronavirus cases and deaths since the beginning of the pandemic. The NUSOJ and IOM COVID-19 reporting handbook for Somali journalists provided key information about how journalists can minimise chances of contracting Covid.
Many unions launched their own safety protocols while calling on the national authorities to make sure that media employers were guaranteeing Covid-safe newsrooms. Unfortunately, this has not been always the case. For example, in some newsrooms in Pakistan, employers forced workers to continue working and going to the newsroom after testing positive, putting themselves and the rest of the staff at serious risk of infection.
Humanitarian aid
While fighting the health crisis was the first priority of the pandemic, trade unions also had to rapidly deal with the social and in many cases humanitarian crisis suffered by their members.
Once again, union solidarity made a difference to help the most vulnerable journalists, especially those who work as freelancers and had no social benefits, to move forward.
There have been many gestures of solidarity from trade unions, even in those countries where the pandemic situation was critical and out of control. The KUJ in Kenya, mobilized resources to help those most in need. APES in El Salvador, delivered basic food baskets to journalists working for small local newspapers suffering the hardest part of the crisis.
“APES help came at the right time.They brought us food, they gave us biosafety equipment that was extremely difficult to find by that timeand that’s how we were able to move forward” said Salvadorian journalist Yaneth Estrada, journalist for Diario Co Latino, in a video recorded for the IFJ.
Journalists are essential workers and we must be treated as such
While it remains difficult to determine the exact number of media workers who have died from the virus worldwide and whether they have been infected while working or somewhere else, it’s easy to acknowledge that hundreds of thousands of journalists have risked their lives informing the public during the pandemic. That is to say: they are essential workers and should be treated as such within the ongoing vaccination campaigns.
This has been widely understood by the IFJ affiliates, who have made significant gains to push the authorities to recognize media workers’ role and their exposure to the virus while reporting. The IJS in Iraq managed to get journalists put on the list of priority groups who are being vaccinated now. The same success was recorded in Uganda, Kenya, Somalia and in some regions in Brazil.
IFJ General Secretary, Anthony Bellanger, said: “Today our thoughts go out to all the journalists killed by Covid-19, their families, friends and colleagues. Also with all our affiliates, who have fought to protect the health and lives of their members even in the most difficult situations. It is imperative that governments act and include journalists in the priority vaccination groups to prevent further deaths in our profession.”
For more information, please contact IFJ on +32 2 235 22 16
The IFJ represents more than 600,000 journalists in 146 countries
Follow the IFJ on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram
Asia-Pacific: 1.8 million workers in #Asia die every year from occupational diseases and accidents
Remember the dead, fight for the living! #SaveLivesAtWork #IWMD21 pic.twitter.com/zBU5o4OV23
1.8 million workers in #Asia die every year from occupational diseases and accidents. This figure does not even represent the real number. Many more work-related deaths are still undocumented and unreported.
Remember the dead, fight for the living! #SaveLivesAtWork #IWMD21 pic.twitter.com/zBU5o4OV23
— ITUC-Asia Pacific (@itucasiapacific) April 28, 2021