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Thu, May 1, 2025

From Tokyo to Los Angeles, workers observe May Day with marches and demonstrations

B360
B360 May 1, 2025, 12:58 pm
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TOKYO: Shouting “banzai!” or “live long,” thousands of people gathered in a Tokyo park on Thursday and marched through the streets to the sound of traditional drums as Japan kicked off celebrations to mark May Day.  

The holiday, also known as International Workers’ Day or Labour Day, marks the struggles and achievements of workers and the labour movement around the world. Thousands of people are expected to attend rallies and marches across the US, including in Chicago, Los Angeles, New York and Philadelphia.  

“For our children to be able to live with hope, the rights of workers must be recognised,” said Junko Kuramochi, a member of a mothers’ group who marched in Japan’s capital.  

US organisers say their message this year is focused on fighting back against President Donald Trump’s policies targeting immigrants, federal workers and diversity initiatives.  

Even in Japan, some said Trump’s policies loomed over the day like a shadow. One truck in the Tokyo march featured a doll that resembled Trump.  

Tadashi Ito, a union construction worker in Japan, said he was concerned about the potential for rising prices of imported raw materials in the months ahead.  

“Everybody is fighting over work, and so the contracts tend to go where the wages are cheapest,” he said.  

“We think peace comes first. And we hope Trump will eradicate conflict and inequalities,” Ito added.  

In Indonesia, President Prabowo Subianto took to the streets of the capital, Jakarta, to greet thousands of workers who cheered him amid tight police and military security in National Monument Park.  

“The government that I lead will work as hard as possible to eliminate poverty from Indonesia,” Subianto told the crowd.  

About 200,000 Indonesian workers were expected to take part in May Day marches across Southeast Asia’s largest economy, according to Said Iqbal, president of the Confederation of Indonesian Trade Unions.  

They are demanding an end to outsourcing rules, wage increases and protections for domestic and migrant workers abroad, Iqbal said.  

In Japan, crowds gathered from the northernmost main island of Hokkaido to the tropical island of Amami and in major cities like Kyoto and Hiroshima.  

Their demands were wide-ranging and included higher wages, gender equality, healthcare, reduced military spending and disaster relief for earthquake victims. They also called for a ceasefire in Gaza and an end to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.  

“Workers unite! Workers of the world! May Day!” they shouted, punctuating each exclamation with the word “banzai!”  

Los Angeles is expected to host one of the world’s largest May Day events this year, and a banner there summarised the day’s theme: “One Struggle, One Fight – Workers Unite!”  

“We’re bringing the fight to the billionaires and politicians who are trying to divide us with fear and lies. We know the truth—an attack on immigrant workers is an attack on all workers,” April Verrett, president of the Service Employees International Union, which represents two million workers, said in a statement.

By RSS/AP  
 

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