Health and essential workers have played an extraordinary role in the global response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Across countries, they have put their health and wellbeing at risk, often in very difficult circumstances and with very little support, to ensure that people are able to access the essential services they need. They have faced reprisals from the authorities and their employers for raising safety concerns, and in some cases have been subject to violence and stigma from members of the public. This report makes concrete recommendations for what governments across the world need to do to comply with their human rights obligations and adequately protect the rights of health and essential workers.
Exposed, silenced, attacked: failures to protect health and essential workers during the COVID-19 pandemic
Topics
- Argentina
- Austria
- Belarus
- Brazil
- Burkina Faso
- Burundi
- Cameroon
- Censorship and Freedom of Expression
- Chile
- Congo
- Côte d'Ivoire
- COVID-19
- Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Denmark
- Discrimination
- Egypt
- El Salvador
- Eritrea
- Ethiopia
- Europe and Central Asia
- Finland
- France
- Freedom of Association
- Ghana
- Greece
- Guatemala
- Guinea
- Honduras
- Hong Kong
- Human Rights Defenders and Activists
- India
- Indonesia
- Italy
- Japan
- Kuwait
- Lesotho
- Libya
- Malaysia
- Mali
- Mexico
- Moldova
- Mongolia
- Namibia
- Nepal
- Nicaragua
- Nigeria
- Pakistan
- Papua New Guinea
- Paraguay
- Philippines
- Poland
- Portugal
- Report
- Research
- Right to Health
- Russia
- Sierra Leone
- Slovenia
- Somalia
- South Africa
- South Sudan
- Spain
- Sudan
- Sweden
- Tajikistan
- Togo
- Tunisia
- Türkiye
- Ukraine
- United Kingdom
- United States of America
- Zimbabwe