Australia: Unions Tasmania to host International Workers’ Memorial Day service, opens completed Workers’ Commemorative Park
Media Release and alert: Unions Tasmania hosts International Workers’ Memorial Day service, opens completed Workers’ Commemorative Park
Unions, workers, families, community members, and political leaders will gather early tomorrow morning to mark International Workers’ Memorial Day, a day of remembrance observed across the globe on the 28th of April each year.
Unions lead services, vigils, and other observances to remember those workers killed or injured because of their work, and to renew our commitment to fight for healthy and safe workplaces.
Monday’s service will take place at the Workers’ Commemorative Park (often referred to as the Workers’ Memorial Park) in Launceston. This years’ service will be particularly meaningful with the park having recently undergone significant works to complete it to its original design. After many years of campaigning for government funding, Unions Tasmania was proud to finally secure funding from the Federal and State Governments to allow this development to occur.
“IWMD is deeply important to unions because it is a day that reflects the very heart of what we stand for: protecting workers so they can make it home safely. The day is a solemn reminder that for every safety campaign we run, there is a worker who did not make it home,” said Unions Tasmania Secretary, Jessica Munday.
“This year, we are pleased to be holding the service in the Workers Commemorative Park which sees most elements of the original design complete. Alongside Guy and Karen Hudson, who conceived of this park after their son Matthew’s tragic death at work, we have worked together to see this park made into an important space for reflection, remembrance, and as a powerful reminder to the broader community to put safety at work first.”
Tragically, over the last five years Australia has recorded on average 191 workers killed each year on the job.
When it comes to progress, Ms Munday said, “We have come a long way in improving safety on the job, including winning industrial manslaughter in Tasmania last year. But we’ve not come far enough. In Tasmania, serious workplace injuries are rising – especially from psychological injury and body strain. Behind every statistic is a person, a family, a community affected. Today is an important day to not just remember workers, but to act for safer workplaces.”
Memorial service details
When: 8:00AM Monday 28 April 2025
Where: Workers’ Commemorative Park, Elizabeth Gardens Invermay (near UTAS Stadium)
Speakers: Jessica Munday, Secretary, Unions Tasmania
Guy Hudson, Workers’ Commemorative Park founder
Senator Helen Polley
The Honourable Felix Ellis MP
Pakistan: ACEEU hold a rally to mark 28 April – Lahore
BWI global union federation affiliate ACEEU will hold a rally in Lahore to mark International Workers’ Memorial Day- 28 April. Union officials will participate in the rally using materials produced by BWI including theme posters.
Canada: CUPE mourns workers’ killed on the job
On April 28 of each year, CUPE members across the country organize events to honour all workers who were killed or injured at work. This year, we mourn the loss of four members of our CUPE family:
- Micheal Adams, CUPE 4705, Ontario
- Dennis Lo, CUPE 718-05, British Columbia
- Sara Sarabosing, CUPE 561-01, British Columbia
- Jean-Eudes Doiron, CUPE 1190, New Brunswick
We are pleased to provide materials for this important day, including the annual poster, workers’ statement, and checklist. Day of Mourning flags, pins, and t-shirts can be ordered online at cupe.ca/store. Please order your materials early to ensure we can fulfill your order.
Putting up the posters, lowering flags to half-mast, and reading the workers’ statement at Workers’ Day of Mourning ceremonies are ways to promote awareness of CUPE’s role in fighting for health and safety improvements in the workplace.We hope that on April 28, you will join us and other workers around the world in reaffirming our commitment to demanding healthier and safer workplaces. For additional information or copies of materials, please contact your national representative or the Health and Safety Branch at National Office.
Global – International Workers’ Memorial Day 2025: Protecting workers’ rights in the age of digitalisation and artificial intelligence – ITUC
AI is transforming the world of work at unprecedented speed. But behind the promise of innovation lies a darker reality: algorithmic management, constant surveillance, impossible productivity targets, and dangerous working conditions. Technology is being used not to improve working conditions and safety, but to exploit them — putting lives and health at risk.
- AI-driven management is already intensifying pressure on 427 million workers worldwide.
- 80% of large employers use AI to track individual worker productivity.
- Workers are facing burnout, injuries and unbearable stress from non-stop monitoring, unrealistic targets and zero input on how technology is used.
“Too often artificial intelligence is being deployed not as a tool for progress but as a weapon against workers.” ITUC General Secretary Luc Triangle
“From warehouses to hospitals, delivery bikes to data labs, workers are under pressure like never before. The deployment of new technologies must respect the norms of any other changes in the workplace: workers have a right be consulted and included. This basic, democratic, workplace right will ensure the use of AI is designed with safety, fairness and dignity at is core. Workers and their unions must have a seat at the table for the benefit of all.”
Deployment of new technologies, such as AI, without proper consultation with workers and their unions is already causing serious problems around the world:
- In the Philippines, 19-year-old delivery rider Jasper Dalman died while working for Foodpanda. His union, RIDERS-SENTRO, won recognition and insurance rights after his death highlighted the deadly consequences of algorithmic exploitation that set impossible productivity targets.
- In Turkey, TikTok content moderators employed by Telus were sacked after organising against inhumane AI-managed workloads and trauma-inducing content.
- In the US, nurses working through platforms face AI-controlled shift apps that bypass worker protections that create dangerous conditions for them and their patients.
The ITUC is calling for:
- Full involvement of unions in the design and deployment of workplace AI.
- Transparent, human-centred technology that upholds rights and safety.
- A binding ILO Convention on platform work to protect all workers in the digital economy.
This 28 April, we remember the dead – and fight for the living. Technology should work for us, not against us.
The new ITUC report, ‘Artificial intelligence and digitalisation: A matter of life and death for workers’, identifies the physical and psychosocial harms at work when these technologies are introduced without consulting workers. Check out the campaign materials.
IWMD 2025 – English graphicsIWMD 2025
IWMD 2025 – Gráficos en españolIWMD 2025
IWMD 2025 – Graphiques en françaisIWMD 2025
IWMD 2025 – Gráficos em portuguêsIWMD 2025
https://www.ituc-csi.org/International-Workers-Memorial-Day-2025
Australia: Opening of new Workers’ Memorial Park, Launceston – Unions Tasmania

(outside UTAS Stadium).
Global: Safe workplaces for fast food workers now! – IUF
Millions of workers are employed by the Fast Food industry globally, on hundreds of thousands of locations. Despite huge growth in numbers of workers and profitability, the sector has chosen to prioritize profits over people with dangerous and abusive working conditions. For many young workers, it’s our first job and one that leaves us scarred for life.
Fast Food workers deserve a safe workplace. And we deserve it now.
France: Direct 28.04 – Journée mondiale de la sécurité et de la santé au travail – CFDT
A l’occasion de la journée mondiale de la sécurité et de la santé au travail, retrouvez-nous en live le 28 avril à 14h (vidéo ci-dessous) pour une rencontre avec les militantes et militants de la maroquinerie, du paysage et de l’hospitalisation privée.
Le 28 avril est un moment important pour des millions de travailleurs et travailleuses à travers le monde. C’est l’occasion de mettre en lumière la nécessité d’agir continuellement pour faire respecter le droit en matière de santé et sécurité au travail.
Cette journée sera l’occasion de valoriser le travail de terrain mené par les équipes CFDT, à travers plusieurs témoignages qui démontrent qu’il est possible, par l’action, de faire évoluer les organisations du travail et d’améliorer les conditions de travail pour agir sur le maintien en emploi en bonne santé.
Global: International Workers’ Memorial Day 2025: Remember the dead, fight for the living – ITF
Every year, thousands of transport workers are killed while doing their jobs. Millions more suffer preventable injuries and illnesses due to dangerous working conditions.
On International Workers’ Memorial Day, we honour their memory — and reaffirm our commitment to fighting for the living.
From aviation to fishing, railways to the streets, docks to the seas – workers are still paying the price for a transport industry too often driven by profit, not safety. And in every corner of the industry, ITF unions are demanding change.
A union movement built on safety
Protecting lives and demanding safe, healthy workplaces has always been at the heart of the trade union movement — and always will be. At the ITF, we believe that no job is worth a life.
At the 2024 ITF Congress, affiliates unanimously passed a motion that makes clear: every transport worker has a fundamental right to a safe and healthy working environment. That means protection from the hazards that cause stress, fatigue, injury, illness or death.
Safety is not optional — it’s a right
Every transport worker has the right to come home safe. But across our industries, employers and governments are still failing to take that right seriously. We’re raising our voice to say: enough is enough.
We’re calling on governments to ratify and enforce international safety standards, including:
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ILO C152 (Dock Work)
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ILO C155 (Occupational Safety and Health)
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ILO C161 (Occupational Health Services)
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ILO C187 (Promotional Framework)
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ILO C188 (Work in Fishing)
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ILO C190 (Violence and Harassment)
These aren’t just conventions. They’re lifesaving protections that every worker deserves.
What we’re demanding from employers
Employers must take responsibility for workers’ safety — across every transport sector, every border, and every shift.
We are demanding action now:
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Guarantee a safe and healthy working environment for all transport workers – whether directly employed, subcontracted, or working informally across global supply chains.
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Work with unions: Safety policies must be developed through negotiation with workers and their representatives.
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Make safety inclusive: That means a gender-responsive approach that protects not just physical safety, but also workers’ mental health, wellbeing, and freedom from violence and harassment.
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Invest in safety: Employers must provide adequate resources to implement safety measures and ensure all workers – including apprentices, cadets and trainees – have equal access to high-quality OSH training.
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Address the full spectrum of risk — including those linked to climate change, cross-border transport, and the introduction of new technologies.
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Recognise the commute as part of the job: Safe transport to and from work is a workplace issue, and employers must extend their duty of care beyond the worksite.
No more negligence. No more exploitation. No more silence.
Occupational safety and health is a fundamental right, and we will keep fighting until every worker, in every corner of transport, is safe.
https://www.itfglobal.org/en/news/international-workers-memorial-day-2025-remember-dead-fight-living
Global: Lugares de trabajo seguros para trabajadores y trabajadoras del sector de comida rápida ¡AHORA!
¿Cómo se puede reconocer a quien trabaja en el sector de comida rápida en cualquier parte del mundo? Por las cicatrices en los brazos.
La industria de la comida rápida emplea a millones de personas en todo el mundo, en cientos de miles de locales. A pesar del enorme crecimiento del número de trabajadores y trabajadoras y de la rentabilidad, el sector ha optado por priorizar las ganancias sobre las personas, con condiciones de trabajo peligrosas y abusivas. Para muchos trabajadores y trabajadoras jóvenes, es nuestro primer trabajo y nos deja cicatrices de por vida.
Los trabajadores y trabajadoras de comida rápida merecemos un lugar de trabajo seguro. Y nos lo merecemos ahora.