Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

Alexander Zagorov: We work in conditions of unknown risk

Unions focus on protecting human health amidst pandemic and pay tribute to all working people who lost their lives to Covid-19

During World Day for Safety and Health at Work, leader of Podkrepa TU Dimitar Manolov (right) and the President of CITUB Plamen Dimitrov (left) brought flowers to the Memorial of victims of labor accidents in Sofia
Photo: BТА

On the World Day for Safety and Health at Work, April 28, the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) has called for classifying Covid-19 as an occupational disease.

The aim is to provide better protection in the workplace, as well as to guarantee the possibility of receiving compensation and medical assistance.

"Although many aspects of the SARS-CoV-2 virus have not yet been fully elucidated, facts indicate that most infections have occurred in the workplace," said Ms. Sharan Burrow, secretary general of the ITUC. “Therefore, the inclusion of Covid-19 in the classification of occupational diseases is crucial in limiting the spread of the virus. This is even more urgent now that countries are beginning to ease restrictions on economic sectors and public spaces."

The fight to overcome the global pandemic and prevention are a major concern for Bulgarian trade unions which are ready for constructive dialogue and interaction.

"Employers have the leading responsibility for everything that happens, and when it comes to safety and health at work, they have a responsibility for each worker and for the whole team," the secretary of Bulgaria’s Podkrepa Confederation of Labour, Alexander Zagorov, told Radio Bulgaria. “The other thing we need to know is that collective safeguards should be prioritized because they can be used to easier protect large groups of people. And when there are no collective measures, individual protection measures must be respected. So far, the biological risks and hazards of contagion have not been so much in the focus of occupational safety and health. They have been the subject of public health. The health system has taken care of sick workers, we have managed to cope as a society, so we think that we will be able to cope also now. However, the practice of recent days shows otherwise. With both outbreaks of infection - at the factory in Pleven and at the Bobov Dol thermal power plant, it turned out that we were far from prepared. At first glance, employers have taken enough measures, but nevertheless the infection has started to penetrate the teams."

Therefore, the classification of Covid-19 as an occupational disease will enhance the public health measures that will be developed over the coming months and years. In this regard, trade unions have called for workplace safety to be granted fundamental rights status by the International Labour Organization. This measure would guarantee the protection of workers against fatal incidents and occupational diseases, along with freedom of association, collective bargaining, protection against discrimination, forced labour and child labour.

English Rossitsa Petcova



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Ivo Ivanov from Radio Bulgaria is among the graduates of BNR's 11th Radio Journalism Master Class

The diplomas from the 11th master class in radio journalism of the Bulgarian National Radio – BNR Academy were awarded at a solemn ceremony on November 14. The lectures and practical classes in modern forms of radio journalism build on the professional..

published on 11/15/25 10:10 AM

Balkan Developments

Italy investigates claims of hunting of people in Sarajevo in the 1990s The prosecutor's office in Milan has launched an investigation into shocking reports of organized "sniper safaris" in Bosnia during the war in..

published on 11/14/25 4:35 PM

Bulgarian doctors conduct reproductive health checkups in Albania

Albania and Bulgaria have joined forces in the name of one more child being born. In the late afternoon of November 7, the first-ever free reproductive medicine checkups, led by Bulgarian specialists, began in the Albanian town of Korçë — a region..

published on 11/14/25 11:02 AM