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#endslaveryhk
jencabanez · 5 years
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Migrant Domestic Workers (MDWs) from Indonesia, Thailand, Nepal, Sri Lanka and the Philippines gather today at the Department of Labour in Sheung Wan to assert their call for just and decent living wage in Hong Kong in the wake of the annual government review of the Minimum Allowable Wage (MAW).
While it is true that the Labour Department & Welfare Bureau calls for a consultation with migrants' organizations and non-government service providers every year, the concerns raised by these groups particularly on rightful increase in wages as well as improved policies for their rights and welfare are ignored, evidence was clear in last year's HK$110 MAW increase and HK$22 food allowance.
Despite the significant contribution of the MDWs, the current MAW of $5420 clearly falls to slave wage level. The Hong Kong government remains apathetic to the MDWs basic needs who have difficulty in coping up with inflation, goods, utilities and services in Hongkong at the same time struggling to provide for the needs of their families way back home.
It's about time to recognize the dignity and value of domestic work as MDWs and demand a humane living wage. Based on Oxfam's December 2018 study on living wage level in Hongkong which they pegged at HK$54.70/hour, the MAW level should be no less than HK$5894/month. This should be applied to local and migrant live-in domestic workers.
We believe that "with a living wage, workers and their families should be able to afford a basic, but descent life style that is considered acceptable by the society at its current level of economic development. Workers and family should be able to live above the poverty level, and be able to participate on social and cultural life. "
Thus we demand the Hong Kong government to:
1. Raise the MAW to HK$5894 to meet the living wage in Hong Kong;
2. Implement an 11-hour uninterrupted rest plus meal breaks stipulated in the standard employment contract (SEC);
3. Ensure descent accommodation for MDWs and stipulate in the SEC the unsuitable accommodations such as toilet, kitchen, hallway, cupboard, warehouse, living room and other unsafe and unhealthy forms of accommodation.
We vow to continue the struggle for a living wage and rights of workers. At the same time, we shall continue to build our unity and strength in the migrant domestic worker's movement and work with the exploited workers in Hong Kong and all over the world in pushing changes that will establish a structure and system that serves the majority and not only the capitalists and exploiting classes.
- From Press Release of Asian Migrants' Coordinating Body (AMCB)
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jihnih · 5 years
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Overworked yet underpaid. The modern day slavery is really in practice especially to Migrant domestic workers in which majority are women. Prone to all form of abuses, women Migrant domestic workers endure these in order to provide financial support to their families way back home. Still is, the lack of concrete policies that should be protecting them from their host country to their government only shows that despite the large contribution of domestic work to global economy, it is still consistently being undervalued. #Mayday2019 #MaydayFeels #LabordayHk2019 #Laborday2019 #endslaveryhk #photographyeveryday #photographyislife #photojournalism #documentaryphotography #documentary #reportage #streetscene #photodocumentary #photostory #womenstreetphotographers #wheninhk #fujifilm_street #explorehk #momentlens #JiniStyle @everydayeverywhere @everydayasia @thecwhpto (at Hong Kong) https://www.instagram.com/p/Bw9guG8HJ67/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=vfxgekcqhxjo
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jencabanez · 5 years
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Despite different diversities, migrant domestic workers from different organizations gather today at the Department of Labour in Sheung Wan to assert our call for just and decent living wage in Hong Kong in the wake of the annual government review of the Minimum Allowable Wage (MAW).
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jencabanez · 5 years
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Organised by the HK Campaign for Human Rights and Peace in the Philippines (HKCAHRPP) under the banner of the International Coalition for Human Rights in the Philippines (ICHRP) - friends from different mass organizations marched to Philippine General Consulate yesterday, June 30 2019.
Carrying the calls to:
Stop the killings in the Philippines.
End impunity.
Stop the attacks on our farmers, human rights defenders, our activists, our press freedom.
Stop the red tagging on our church and Church leaders.
We are all united to stop the attacks! Resist and raged fist high up!
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jencabanez · 5 years
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Fight for a living wage and the rights of migrant workers
End exploitation of all workers
Statement of the AMCB-IMA-HK on Labour Day 2019
01 May 2019
Migrant workers, under the banner of the Asian Migrants Coordinating Body (AMCB) – member of the global formation International Migrants Alliance (IMA) – are with all the working people in Hong Kong and the world in marking the continuing struggles of workers against exploitation and oppression in the name of profit-making and taking by the few.
Hong Kong workers, both migrants and locals, are no strangers to capitalist greed for profits. Enabled by policies that are oriented and servile to business interests, wages of workers are nailed to a floor level that is not enough to live by in the face of rising prices of goods, real estate and constricting social services that drives workers to private services.
A living wage is a fight of all workers in Hong Kong who endure slave wage level.
For migrants who are mostly domestic workers, the struggle to pull up the minimum allowable wage to a living wage is a constant struggle.
Based on the computations of the AMCB-IMA-HK drawn from the definition, studies and standards of living wage, the minimum wage of migrant domestic workers should be HK$5,894 per month. The current MAW at HK$4,520 per month only translates from HK$9 per hour (for 16-hour work day) to HK$12 per hour (for 12-hour work day) which is only 16-21 per cent of the estimated HK$54.7 hourly rate estimated by a study of Oxfam to have a living wage.
Local workers face an essentially similar situation where their wage of HK$34.50 per hour remains a far cry from the estimated living wage level.
Instead of taking decisive actions to increase the wage of all workers, particularly the minimum wage earners, the Hong Kong government occasionally increases the MAW for migrants by approximately HK$2 to HK$4 per month. For local workers, even the reported plan to have an increase of HK$3 to the per hour minimum wage will definitely not be enough to approach the living wage standard.
Meanwhile, the slave wage situation of migrants is even compounded by the refusal of the Hong Kong government to improve the living and working condition of migrant domestic workers. Despite studies and concrete proof of the dire situation of MDWs pertaining to accommodation and working hours, the government has kept on disregarding demands to have more defined rules on decent accommodation of MDWs as well as regulation of working hours.
When it comes to workers, including migrants, the Hong Kong government persists in maintaining the “business as usual” situation.
For this Labor Day 2019, MDWs under AMCB-IMA-HK are marching with our local working brothers and sisters to fight for a living wage and various labor rights that are sacrificed to the altar of capitalist profit-making and taking.
Migrant workers demand for the Hong Kong government to:
1. Raise the MAW to HK$5,894 to meet the living wage in HK;
2. Implement an 11-hour uninterrupted rest plus meal breaks stipulated in the standard employment contract (SEC);
3. Ensure decent accommodation for MDWs and stipulate in the SEC the unsuitable accommodations such as toilet, kitchen, hallway, cupboard, warehouse, living room and other unsafe and unhealthy forms of accommodation;
4. End illegal collection and overcharging;
5. Legislate a comprehensive anti-trafficking law, and;
6. Abolish all discriminatory immigration policies such as the “two-week rule”, mandatory live-in policy, denial of visa to suspected “job-hoppers” and ban on Nepalese workers
We deplore continuing efforts, fanned by government inaction, to drive a wedge between migrants and local workers under false analyses of the roots of deteriorating situation of workers. Capitalist crisis is fueled by its own greed and, in the end, all working people suffer from worsening exploitation, diminishing services, and eroding rights.
Today, we fight for a living wage and the rights of workers. Beyond, we shall continue to build our unity and strengthen the worker’s movement in Hong Kong that is one with the workers of the world in pushing for changes that will establish a structure and system that serves the majority and not only the capitalists and exploiting classes.
Long live worker’s unity!
Long live international solidarity!
#LaborDay2019
#LabourDayHK2019
#EndSlaveryHK
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jihnih · 5 years
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Fight for a living wage and the rights of migrant workers
End exploitation of all workers
Statement of the AMCB-IMA-HK on Labour Day 2019
01 May 2019
Migrant workers, under the banner of the Asian Migrants Coordinating Body (AMCB) – member of the global formation International Migrants Alliance (IMA) – are with all the working people in Hong Kong and the world in marking the continuing struggles of workers against exploitation and oppression in the name of profit-making and taking by the few.
Hong Kong workers, both migrants and locals, are no strangers to capitalist greed for profits. Enabled by policies that are oriented and servile to business interests, wages of workers are nailed to a floor level that is not enough to live by in the face of rising prices of goods, real estate and constricting social services that drives workers to private services.
A living wage is a fight of all workers in Hong Kong who endure slave wage level.
For migrants who are mostly domestic workers, the struggle to pull up the minimum allowable wage to a living wage is a constant struggle.
Based on the computations of the AMCB-IMA-HK drawn from the definition, studies and standards of living wage, the minimum wage of migrant domestic workers should be HK$5,894 per month. The current MAW at HK$4,520 per month only translates from HK$9 per hour (for 16-hour work day) to HK$12 per hour (for 12-hour work day) which is only 16-21 per cent of the estimated HK$54.7 hourly rate estimated by a study of Oxfam to have a living wage.
Local workers face an essentially similar situation where their wage of HK$34.50 per hour remains a far cry from the estimated living wage level.
Instead of taking decisive actions to increase the wage of all workers, particularly the minimum wage earners, the Hong Kong government occasionally increases the MAW for migrants by approximately HK$2 to HK$4 per month. For local workers, even the reported plan to have an increase of HK$3 to the per hour minimum wage will definitely not be enough to approach the living wage standard.
Meanwhile, the slave wage situation of migrants is even compounded by the refusal of the Hong Kong government to improve the living and working condition of migrant domestic workers. Despite studies and concrete proof of the dire situation of MDWs pertaining to accommodation and working hours, the government has kept on disregarding demands to have more defined rules on decent accommodation of MDWs as well as regulation of working hours.
When it comes to workers, including migrants, the Hong Kong government persists in maintaining the “business as usual” situation.
For this Labor Day 2019, MDWs under AMCB-IMA-HK are marching with our local working brothers and sisters to fight for a living wage and various labor rights that are sacrificed to the altar of capitalist profit-making and taking.
Migrant workers demand for the Hong Kong government to:
1. Raise the MAW to HK$5,894 to meet the living wage in HK;
2. Implement an 11-hour uninterrupted rest plus meal breaks stipulated in the standard employment contract (SEC);
3. Ensure decent accommodation for MDWs and stipulate in the SEC the unsuitable accommodations such as toilet, kitchen, hallway, cupboard, warehouse, living room and other unsafe and unhealthy forms of accommodation;
4. End illegal collection and overcharging;
5. Legislate a comprehensive anti-trafficking law, and;
6. Abolish all discriminatory immigration policies such as the “two-week rule”, mandatory live-in policy, denial of visa to suspected “job-hoppers” and ban on Nepalese workers
We deplore continuing efforts, fanned by government inaction, to drive a wedge between migrants and local workers under false analyses of the roots of deteriorating situation of workers. Capitalist crisis is fueled by its own greed and, in the end, all working people suffer from worsening exploitation, diminishing services, and eroding rights.
Today, we fight for a living wage and the rights of workers. Beyond, we shall continue to build our unity and strengthen the worker’s movement in Hong Kong that is one with the workers of the world in pushing for changes that will establish a structure and system that serves the majority and not only the capitalists and exploiting classes.
Long live worker’s unity!
Long live international solidarity!
#LaborDay2019
#LabourDayHK2019
#EndSlaveryHK
0 notes
jihnih · 5 years
Text
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Fight for a living wage and the rights of migrant workers
End exploitation of all workers
Statement of the AMCB-IMA-HK on Labour Day 2019
01 May 2019
Migrant workers, under the banner of the Asian Migrants Coordinating Body (AMCB) – member of the global formation International Migrants Alliance (IMA) – are with all the working people in Hong Kong and the world in marking the continuing struggles of workers against exploitation and oppression in the name of profit-making and taking by the few.
Hong Kong workers, both migrants and locals, are no strangers to capitalist greed for profits. Enabled by policies that are oriented and servile to business interests, wages of workers are nailed to a floor level that is not enough to live by in the face of rising prices of goods, real estate and constricting social services that drives workers to private services.
A living wage is a fight of all workers in Hong Kong who endure slave wage level.
For migrants who are mostly domestic workers, the struggle to pull up the minimum allowable wage to a living wage is a constant struggle.
Based on the computations of the AMCB-IMA-HK drawn from the definition, studies and standards of living wage, the minimum wage of migrant domestic workers should be HK$5,894 per month. The current MAW at HK$4,520 per month only translates from HK$9 per hour (for 16-hour work day) to HK$12 per hour (for 12-hour work day) which is only 16-21 per cent of the estimated HK$54.7 hourly rate estimated by a study of Oxfam to have a living wage.
Local workers face an essentially similar situation where their wage of HK$34.50 per hour remains a far cry from the estimated living wage level.
Instead of taking decisive actions to increase the wage of all workers, particularly the minimum wage earners, the Hong Kong government occasionally increases the MAW for migrants by approximately HK$2 to HK$4 per month. For local workers, even the reported plan to have an increase of HK$3 to the per hour minimum wage will definitely not be enough to approach the living wage standard.
Meanwhile, the slave wage situation of migrants is even compounded by the refusal of the Hong Kong government to improve the living and working condition of migrant domestic workers. Despite studies and concrete proof of the dire situation of MDWs pertaining to accommodation and working hours, the government has kept on disregarding demands to have more defined rules on decent accommodation of MDWs as well as regulation of working hours.
When it comes to workers, including migrants, the Hong Kong government persists in maintaining the “business as usual” situation.
For this Labor Day 2019, MDWs under AMCB-IMA-HK are marching with our local working brothers and sisters to fight for a living wage and various labor rights that are sacrificed to the altar of capitalist profit-making and taking.
Migrant workers demand for the Hong Kong government to:
1. Raise the MAW to HK$5,894 to meet the living wage in HK;
2. Implement an 11-hour uninterrupted rest plus meal breaks stipulated in the standard employment contract (SEC);
3. Ensure decent accommodation for MDWs and stipulate in the SEC the unsuitable accommodations such as toilet, kitchen, hallway, cupboard, warehouse, living room and other unsafe and unhealthy forms of accommodation;
4. End illegal collection and overcharging;
5. Legislate a comprehensive anti-trafficking law, and;
6. Abolish all discriminatory immigration policies such as the “two-week rule”, mandatory live-in policy, denial of visa to suspected “job-hoppers” and ban on Nepalese workers
We deplore continuing efforts, fanned by government inaction, to drive a wedge between migrants and local workers under false analyses of the roots of deteriorating situation of workers. Capitalist crisis is fueled by its own greed and, in the end, all working people suffer from worsening exploitation, diminishing services, and eroding rights.
Today, we fight for a living wage and the rights of workers. Beyond, we shall continue to build our unity and strengthen the worker’s movement in Hong Kong that is one with the workers of the world in pushing for changes that will establish a structure and system that serves the majority and not only the capitalists and exploiting classes.
Long live worker’s unity!
Long live international solidarity!
#LaborDay2019
#LabourDayHK2019
#EndSlaveryHK
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jencabanez · 5 years
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