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SSS'ye göz atınAbout Amelia
Amelia Martha Nakitimbo is a Ugandan international broadcast journalist and media leader with close to ten years' experience in the newsroom. Her career has taken her on assignments in South Africa, Dubai, Côte d'Ivoire, Republic of Congo (Brazzaville) and Uganda. Amelia thrives as a panel moderator steering impactful discussions and conversations, and as a show host. She has led multi-cultural, multi-lingual teams one of which was a fact-checking newsroom. She considers herself a global citizen who can feel at home in any part of the world. She is curious about current affairs and information that explains why world order.
Portföy
The 2014 global oil crisis left thousands without jobs in the Republic of Congo. Several workers were laid off in the oil sector, the country's largest contributor to the GDP. But a number of companies are now in legal battles, with employers taking initiatives like Cafè RH, a workshop to find answers to difficult money questions.
“Can workers who are laid off during an economic crisis fault the employer for not offering them negotiated termination?” asked one of the participants.
How COVID-19 restrictions favoured maritime trade in Pointe Noire, Republic of Congo/Gulf of Guinea in 2020.
Over 12000 Ugandans leave for the Middle East to work as casual labourers. Some of these never make it back home alive, and there are various reports detailing how these workers are subjected to inhumane work conditions including confiscation of travel documents by both their employers and labour export recruiters.
In this episode of Month of the Woman on SEE TV, Agnes Igoye Uganda's Deputy National Coordinator, Prevention of Trafficking in Persons and Badru Tamale, Legal Officer, Platform for Labor Action join Amelia Martha Nakitimbo to discuss worker's rights.