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- Hong Kong’s Migrant Domestic Workers Mourn Their Losses in Deadly Fire
At least eight workers died, and many of those who survived, after saving children and others in their care, are worried about losing their jobs and being forced to leave
- Migrant domestic workers seek support, solace after Hong Kong fire
Migrant domestic workers seek support, solace after Hong Kong fire Filipino and Indonesian workers gather to mourn after the deadly fire killed at least ten Southeast Asian migrant workers
- Hong Kong’s Migrant Domestic Workers Mourn Their Losses in Deadly Fire
Calls for Protection and Support Human‑rights groups and labor unions are urging the Hong Kong government to provide immediate protection for these workers, including: Ensuring that no employer can dismiss a worker for circumstances beyond their control Offering legal assistance and counseling for the families of the deceased
- Workers from Philippines and Indonesia among victims as Hong Kong . . .
Hong Kong mourns 128 dead after a blaze gutted high-rises in Tai Po, with 200 residents still unaccounted for At least two Indonesian domestic workers died, while 19 Filipina workers remain missing, according to a migrant women’s refuge executive director Authorities arrested 11 people over
- Migrant Community in Hong Kong Mourns After Catastrophic Fire
Grief resonated throughout Victoria Park in Hong Kong during the weekend as countless migrant domestic workers assembled to honor those lost in the city’s most deadly fire in over a century Many attendees arrived with candles, photographs, and aching hearts, desperately seeking news about those who remain unaccounted for following the inferno at Wang Fuk Court Of the 146 confirmed
- Migrant groups mobilise support for domestic workers as 7 Indonesians . . .
HK migrant labour NGOs are working around the clock to locate domestic workers still missing after the fatal Tai Po fire and to support survivors, as more migrant workers have been confirmed dead
- Migrant domestic workers seek support, solace after Hong Kong fire . . .
Sobs could be heard across Hong Kong's Victoria Park at the weekend as hundreds of migrant workers mourned victims of Hong Kong's worst fire in decades and prayed for missing friends Those at the Victoria Park event sang hymns and prayed near a banner on the ground that read: "Dearly departed ones: highest respect and recognition to the loyalty and bravery of migrant domestic workers "
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