Virus worries haunt workers demanding rights on May Day
ATHENS, Greece — No job at all, or a job without enough protections — millions of workers worldwide marked international labour day trapped between hunger and fear Friday, as more countries and states reopen for business even though the coronavirus is far from vanquished.
Beijing’s Forbidden City, the imperial palace turned museum that is one the country’s biggest tourist attractions, cracked open its doors, and shopping malls around the U.S. were set to do the same, while world leaders try to salvage their battered economies without unleashing new waves of infections.
With traditional May Day labour marches curtailed by strict limits on public gatherings, Turkish protesters attempted to stage a wildcat demonstration. California activists planned strikes, and Parisians sang from balconies to plead their causes: workplace masks, health insurance or more government aid for the jobless.
It was a melancholy International Workers’ Day for garment workers across Southeast Asia such as Wiryono, a father of two in Indonesia’s capital, Jakarta, who was laid off last month as retailers slashed orders. His side gig delivering coffee dried up, too, amid a virus lockdown. So he set up a clothing repair business to make ends meet.