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Shiho Fukada

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  • LEFT: Doors of a cheap motel where many day labors and welfare recipients live are seen in Kamagasaki, Japan.<br />
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RIGHT: Keys of cheap motel where many day labors and welfare recipients stay are seen in Kamagasaki, Japan.
    Kamagasaki010.JPG
  • LEFT:  A pair of slippers are seen at a cheap motel where many day labors live in Kamagasaki, Japan. <br />
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RIGHT: Hiromi Okamoto, 74, lives in a tiny room paid by welfare in Kamagasaki, Japan.
    Kamagasaki007.JPG
  • Men in Kamagasak, from clockwise right: Tamiichi Kuwata, 65, who depends on welfare, Syunsuke Fujii, 64, unemployed  construction worker, Satoshi Sato, 64.
    Kamagasaki024.JPG
  • LEFT: Kazuki, 65, stands in front of his shack  built in a park in Kamagasaki, Japan. <br />
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RIGHT: A trash can is seen at a laundry mat in Kamagasaki, Japan.
    Kamagasaki008.JPG
  • LEFT: Hiromi Minakami, 70, lives in a tiny room paid by welfare in Kamagasaki, Japan. <br />
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RIGHT: A pillow of Hiromi Minakami, 70, who lives in a tiny room paid by welfare, is seen in Kamagasaki, Japan.
    Kamagasaki009.JPG
  • Rubel, 16,  works at aluminum factory in Dhaka, Bangladesh. He works 8 hours a day 6 days a week and earns 1400tks (US$20) a month (70tks=US1D)<br />
He wishes to be a teacher when he grows up.<br />
<br />
Poverty pushes estimated 6 to 7 million children to work in Bangladesh, comprising one-fifth of the country’s labor force.<br />
There are some 40 industries in Bangladesh using child labor, often under hazardous conditions and with little regard for health and safety. <br />
Most perform their duties for little or no pay without access to education leaving them trapped in low-skilled, low-paying jobs that further binds them in a cycle of poverty.
    BNGLA_Child Labor001.JPG
  • Zihadul Islam, 12, works at aluminum factory in Dhaka, Bangladesh. He works 8 hours a day 6 days a week and earns 1400tks (US$20) a month (70tks=US1D)
    BNGLA_Child Labor004.JPG
  • Uzzal, 12, slaughters chicken in Dhaka, Bangladesh. He has been working for 5 years and earns 30tks a day. (70tks=us1d).
    BNGLA_Child Labor008.JPG
  • A migrant farm worker works in tomato field in Immokalee, FL, Apr. 17, 2003. Workers are paid 40 to 45 cents per 30 pound bucket, which is the same rate they were paid in 1980s. In order to make $50 a day, they pick and haul 125 buckets or two tons of tomatoes. To make that quota, pickers work fast, picking, filling, hauling, and throwing buckets.
    Immokalee Workers006.JPG
  • Migrant farm workers  take a break in tomato field in Immokalee, FL, Apr. 17, 2003.  Workers are paid 40 to 45 cents per 30 pound bucket, which is the same rate they were paid in 1980s. In order to make $50 a day, they pick and haul 125 buckets or two tons of tomatoes. To make that quota, pickers work fast, picking, filling, hauling, and throwing buckets.
    Immokalee Workers010.JPG
  • Migrant farm workers count their day's earnings in  Immokalee, FL,  Apr.16, 2003.
    Immokalee Workers013.JPG