The 9th year of #SGMuslims4MigrantWorkers!
This year, we aim to raise at least $70,000 for Migrant Mutual Aid (MMA) inshaAllah:
FIRST $50,000 OF YOUR ZAKAT GOES TO:
Dedicated MMA fund for bereaved families of Muslim migrant workers
Provides basic financial support so families have time to grieve and establish new sources of income to sustain themselves.
No other organisation runs a fund of this kind.
Emergency MMA fund to finance urgent cases
Most commonly supports urgent medical needs, where high costs and critical timing makes fundraising infeasible.
Also covers emergencies like abrupt repatriation due to illness/injury, and support to escape abusive employers, etc.
$20,000 (AND ALL FURTHER FUNDS) WILL GO TO:
Specialised fund for outpatient treatment costs for migrant workers with critical illnesses
Ground-up initiative launched in December 2024.
First fund dedicated to workers with critical illnesses.
Disbursement decisions made by an independent Council comprising doctors, insurance professionals, employment agents and civil society reps.
MMA is a Council Member.
All disbursements to Muslim migrant workers and their families through the Fund for Bereaved Families and the Standing Solidarity Fund will be listed in MMA’s monthly newsletters (which you can see here). All funds disbursed to Muslim migrant workers through the CritiCare Fund will be reported on their website as well as in a donor report to SGMuslims4MigrantWorkers.
Replenish Migrant Mutual Aid (MMA)’s Fund for Bereaved Families
Since it was founded in 2020 – at the height of the COVID-19 crisis – MMA has undertaken a growing caseload supporting vulnerable migrant workers. While supporting seriously ill or injured migrant workers who eventually passed away, MMA found itself increasingly called upon to provide support to their widows and families as well. Having lost their sole or primary breadwinners, these families faced great emotional and financial hardship.
Thus, in 2023, with zakat and donations from the #SGMuslims4MigrantWorkers community MMA established a specialised fund for the bereaved families of Muslim migrant workers. This fund – the Fund for Bereaved Families – would provide basic financial support to give these families time to grieve and set their affairs in order, and to establish alternative sources of income to sustain themselves.
The funds raised in 2023 for the inaugural Fund for Bereaved Families had a great and meaningful impact. MMA supported 12 families with the $44,837 raised. In 2025, MMA supported 2 families disbursing $3,860 (most of the zakat raised last year went towards the Standing Solidarity Fund detailed below). These disbursements cover funeral costs, living expenses, and outstanding loan repayments left behind following the death of their primary breadwinner. Full case and disbursement details are provided in this link. Please exercise caution and self-care reading this document as details may be distressing.
This Ramadan, we are once again fundraising to replenish the Fund for Bereaved Families, to ensure that widows and children left behind by Muslim migrant workers who pass away are not left entirely destitute. While there have been ad hoc fundraisers for certain high profile fatalities, no other organisation runs a specialised Fund to consistently support bereaved families.
As a general principle, the Fund for Bereaved Families provides disbursements to assist families for a period of six months with their living expenses, as well as funeral costs if needed, in order to give them time to grieve and to establish alternative sources of income to sustain themselves. Other factors may be taken into account on a case-by-case basis: for example, disbursements may also include paying off any outstanding debt incurred to meet earlier needs.
Your zakat and donations will directly support Muslim bereaved families, such as the family of 29 -year-old N, who tragically lost his life to stage 4 stomach cancer in March 2025 after multiple GP visits that misdiagnosed him with gastritis.
The cases supported by MMA represent only a small fraction of the migrant fatalities in Singapore. Many of these deaths, and the resulting impact on families, are linked to systemic issues such as unsafe transportation, inaccessible healthcare, and low wages. Lorry accidents and workplace injuries continue to add to the number of families facing not only the grief of bereavement but also a major loss of livelihood. Your support can provide some relief to as many bereaved families as possible and give them a chance to regain their footing.
Replenish MMA’s Standing Solidarity Fund
In most cases, MMA relies on community fundraising, on a case-by-case basis, to support vulnerable migrant workers who need assistance. Over time, MMA recognised that certain individuals require immediate financial support, especially emergency medical cases. MMA set up the Standing Solidarity Fund (SSF) in 2021 to finance urgent cases and to supplement case-specific fundraisers. Since then, the Standing Solidarity Fund has allowed MMA to disburse $179,485.44 (as of February 2026) to migrant workers for their emergency needs.
The most common need the SSF supports is access to medical care. It also supports other urgent needs that migrant workers face as a result of their illness or injury. For example, workers who are seriously ill or injured are often fired and repatriated immediately to their home countries, resulting in a major loss of income. The SSF gives them and their families some subsistence support while they figure out their next steps.
In medical cases, especially involving serious injuries or illnesses, time is critical in order to ensure that workers’ conditions do not deteriorate irreversibly. Medical bills also tend to be high. The urgency and the large bills in medical cases makes it infeasible to start an individual fundraiser in each case. For example, in 2024, MMA assisted J, a Bangladeshi migrant worker with stage 4 lymphoma, who needed $20,000 for a bone marrow transplant. After his family sold their land to fund part of this sum, they requested MMA’s support for the remaining $9,500. Despite vigorous fundraising for over 4 months, the funds raised still fell short of this target, and needed a top-up of $$2,353.87 from the SSF, in order to ensure that J could afford this transplant. Eventually, J did succumb to his lymphoma, and MMA was able to support his wife with $1,860 for loan repayments and support for living expenses using zakat funds from the Fund for Bereaved Families.
Apart from medical needs, this fund also supports other adhoc needs for workers who find themselves in dire situations. These include anything from early termination to work injury to blatant sex trafficking where women are brought under the premise of a regular F&B job, only to be forced to perform sex work in massage parlours. Examples of cases supported through SSF include:
- K is a Bangladeshi migrant worker who worked in a painting company in Singapore. He was beaten up and physically abused by his employer for coming to work late one morning. Two of his colleagues faced similar abuse from the same employer. The 2 other colleagues lodged a police report against said boss and were repatriated immediately, thus K approached MMA for help. MMA accompanied him to the authorities to request for a company transfer instead. In the meantime, SSF’s urgent disbursal funded his phone top ups and standby cash for a taxi in case he had to escape his dormitory due to the harassment and abuse.
- L, a 38-year-old Bangladeshi construction worker, suffered a hip and head injury after falling from a 3m ladder at work in July 2023. Despite an ongoing salary dispute, his employer deported him, citing a complaint that he was living outside his designated dormitory—though this had initially been approved due to his inability to climb stairs. Back in Bangladesh, K faced a $5,000 employment debt secured against his home, with loan sharks demanding repayment. Unable to work while recovering and awaiting his unresolved WICA compensation, he relied on community support to keep his home.Seeking help for his family’s living expenses, he received $1,380 for three months of support. MMA disbursed $1,380 from the SSF to support three months’ worth of his family’s living expenses.
Full case and disbursement details for cases supported through the SSF with 2025 zakat funds are provided in this link.
Your zakat provides financial relief to these workers and buys them time to get back on their feet. The more funds raised, the more workers MMA can support.
CritiCare Fund for Migrant Workers
The CritiCare Fund for Migrant Workers was launched in December 2024 as Singapore’s first volunteer-led fund dedicated to supporting migrant workers diagnosed with critical illnesses.
The CritiCare Fund responds to a systemic issue that #SGMuslims4MigrantWorkers has continually raised funds for during our past eight years, namely, the medical insecurity of migrant workers. As we have explained throughout our yearly campaigns, there are many reasons why ill or injured migrant workers may be unable to access medical care. While Singapore mandates a minimum $60,000 annual medical insurance for migrant workers, this excludes outpatient treatments such as chemotherapy, medication and follow-up diagnostics. Migrant workers also pay unsubsidized rates in Singapore’s public hospitals, which means there is no differentiation between a low-wage migrant worker and a highly paid expat executive when they seek help in public hospitals, making treatment prohibitively expensive. Migrant workers who are seriously ill are often fired by their employers and repatriated to their home countries.
SGMuslims4MigrantWorkers has consistently raised funds through the years to support – through funds like MMA’s Standing Solidarity Fund – access to medical care for ill and injured Muslim migrant workers. We welcome this next step in our advocacy and fundraising by supporting the CritiCare Fund, MMA sits on the Council of the CritiCare Fund and works closely with them to share the caseload of migrant workers requiring assistance and complement each other’s work.
The CritiCare Fund provides targeted financial assistance to support medical treatment, diagnostics, and related costs. To date, they have assessed 26 migrant workers (including 9 domestic workers and 17 workers from the Construction, Marine and Process sectors) and approved disbursements for 7 cases, committing S$36,325 in financial assistance to support medical treatment and care. Case include:
- B, a 51-year old domestic worker who required funds to perform a PET Scan for a more accurate cancer diagnosis
- R, a 53-year old domestic worker who required funds for diagnostic tests for a more accurate cancer diagnosis
- N, a 46-year old migrant construction worker who was diagnosed with Stage 3 Hogkin’s Lymphoma
- L, a 29-year old domestic worker who was diagnosed with Stage 2 Cervical Cancer
- M, a 38-year old cleaner who suffered an amputation of her leg after a serious road accident
- BA, a 54-year old migrant construction worker who was diagnosed with serious primary membranous nephropathy with a high risk of kidney failure
- NZ, a 40-year old migrant construction worker who was diagnosed with Blood Cancer
All applications are assessed through a careful and accountable process. A volunteer Secretariat Team receives and reviews applications from workers and their employers, before presenting them to an independent Council comprising doctors, insurance professionals, employment agents, and civil society representatives. Disbursement decisions are made collectively, based on need and available resources. All cases are anonymised in public communications to protect the dignity and privacy of workers and their families.
Apart from fundraising and case support, the CritiCare Fund aims in the long term to collect data and insights to inform systemic reforms, including the potential development of group insurance products with meaningful critical illness coverage, and renewed discussions around subsidised outpatient care for migrant workers facing serious illness.
Heart attacks, cancer, stroke and diabetes are some of the leading causes of death among migrant workers in Singapore. They are at higher risk of non-work-related illnesses due to their living and working conditions, lack of access to preventative health screening, care, and medication. Yet despite giving their best years to our country, many workers are unable to access adequate medical care when they need it.
Your support this Ramadan would ensure that fewer Muslim migrant workers are left stranded without access to medical treatment, and also help us build systemic reform for the future, inshaAllah.
Kempen #SGMuslims4MigrantWorkers kini sudah memasuki tahun kesembilan!
Tahun ini, kami menetapkan sasaran mengumpulkan sekurang-kurangnya $70,000 buat Migrant Mutual Aid (MMA), insya-Allah:
Bagi tujuan menokok Tabung Keluarga Berkabung (BFF) (khusus buat balu dan keluarga pekerja asing yang meninggal dunia) dan Tabung Perpaduan (SSF) (saluran bantuan kewangan kepada pekerja asing beragama Islam serta keluarga mereka membiayai keperluan perubatan dan kecemasan lain), kedua-duanya di bawah MMA, sebanyak $50,000.
Bakinya nanti akan disalurkan kepada Dana CritiCare Pekerja Asing, iaitu dana pertama di Singapura pimpinan relawan masyarakat bagi menyokong pekerja yang disahkan menghidapi penyakit kritikal. MMA merupakan anggota Lembaga Dana CritiCare dan saling bekerjasama membantu pekerja memerlukan.
Menokok Tabung Keluarga Berkabung (BFF) MMA
Ditubuhkan lewat tahun 2020 pada kemuncak krisis COVID-19, MMA kini menguruskan jumlah kes yang kian meningkat dalam kalangan pekerja asing. Semasa membantu pekerja sedemikian, yang tidak lama kemudian meninggal dunia, MMA mendapati dirinya terus dihubungi balu dan pihak keluarga bagi mendapatkan sokongan tambahan. Selepas kematian ketua keluarga masing-masing, mereka menderita daripada segi emosi dan kewangan.
Oleh sebab itu, pada tahun 2023, berbekalkan wang zakat dan derma daripada masyarakat #SGMuslims4MigrantWorkers, MMA menubuhkan dana khusus buat keluarga pekerja Muslim asing yang sedang berkabung. Dana tersebut – Tabung Keluarga Berkabung (BFF) – menyediakan bantuan kewangan asas agar mereka mampu berkabung dengan tenang, menguruskan pelbagai hal selepas kematian dan mencari sumber nafkah lain demi meneruskan hidup.
Dana yang terkumpul pada tahun 2023 buat julung-julung kalinya untuk BFF berjaya meninggalkan kesan yang besar lagi bermakna. MMA berjaya membantu 12 keluarga dengan wang terkumpul berjumlah $44,837. Pada tahun 2025, MMA membantu dua keluarga menggunakan dana berjumlah $3,860 (kebanyakan daripada wang zakat yang diterima tahun lalu disalurkan kepada SSF seperti yang tertera di bawah). Pembahagian wang itu membiayai kos pengebumian, sara hidup keluarga dan pelunasan hutang arwah.
Butiran kes dan pembahagian dana boleh dibaca di sini. Pembaca diminta berwaspada ketika membaca kerana dokumen mengandungi butiran kes yang boleh menggugat ketenteraman.
Pada bulan Ramadan ini, kami sekali lagi bergotong-royong mengumpulkan dana menokok BFF demi memastikan balu dan anak-anak yang ditinggalkan tidak terbiar begitu sahaja. Sebelum ini, usaha-usaha sementara mengumpul dana memang wujud. Namun, setakat ini, belum ada pertubuhan khusus yang mengendalikan dana istimewa secara tekal buat keluarga-keluarga tersebut.
Pada terasnya, BFF menyediakan bantuan biaya urusan pengebumian dan sara hidup selama enam bulan kepada keluarga pekerja yang meninggal dunia itu. Hal ini dilakukan agar mereka boleh berkabung dengan tenang dan mencari sumber pendapatan lain untuk menyara diri. Setiap kes akan dinilaikan secara sendirian, misalnya pembahagian dana boleh membantu melangsaikan hutang arwah.
Sumbangan zakat dan derma anda akan membantu keluarga Muslim yang sedang berkabung secara langsung, umpamanya keluarga pekerja yang bernama ‘N’, 29 tahun. ‘N’ maut akibat barah perut tahap keempat pada bulan Mac 2025 setelah beberapa doktor tersilap mengesahkannya menghadapi sakit gastritis semata.
Kes-kes yang diuruskan MMA merangkumi bahagian kecil sahaja daripada jumlah kematian secara keseluruhan yang berlaku dalam kalangan pekerja asing di Singapura. Banyak kes kematian dan kesannya ke atas keluarga mangsa terkait dengan isu yang sudah lama berakar tanpa huraian di sini seperti kaedah pengangkutan yang tidak selamat, penjagaan kesihatan yang tidak mencukupi dan gaji yang rendah. Kemalangan melibatkan lori dan kecederaan di tempat kerja terus menaikkan jumlah keluarga yang bukan sahaja menderitai pemergian orang tersayang malah kehilangan sumber pendapatan utama.
Sokongan anda boleh meringankan beban jiwa keluarga mangsa, di samping mengupayakan mereka bertapak semula di alam nyata.
Menokok Tabung Perpaduan (SSF) MMA
Secara amnya, MMA bergantung pada usaha pengumpulan dana daripada masyarakat mengikut keperluan pekerja yang memohon. Saban waktu, MMA memerhatikan bahawa beberapa individu memerlukan bantuan kewangan pada kadar segera, terutamanya kes-kes kecemasan.
Disebabkan itu, MMA menubuhkan SSF pada tahun 2021 untuk membiayai keperluan kes-kes mendesak serta memberi sokongan tambahan kepada kempen-kempen khusus. Sejak daripada itu, SSF telah membolehkan MMA mengagihkan sebanyak $179,485.44 (setakat Februari 2026) kepada pekerja asing yang mempunyai keperluan mendesak.
Keperluan utama yang disokong SSF adalah mendapatkan penjagaan kesihatan. Dana itu turut membiayai keperluan mendesak lain berkaitan kesakitan yang dihadapi. Sebagai contoh, pekerja yang sakit tenat lazimnya dibuang kerja lalu dihantar pulang ke negara masing-masing, lantas kehilangan mata pencarian. Dalam hal ini, SSF membantu mereka dan keluarga meneruskan hidup sementara mencari jalan keluar.
Bagi kes-kes perubatan, terutama sekali yang melibatkan penyakit serius, faktor masa sangat kritikal demi memastikan keadaan pekerja tidak merosot hingga tidak mampu diubati. Bil perubatan juga cukup mahal. Faktor keterdesakan dan nilainya yang tinggi menyukarkan lagi penubuhan kempen pengumpulan dana sendirian.
Contohnya, pada tahun 2024, MMA membantu ‘J’, pekerja asing asal Bangladesh yang menghidapi barah limfoma. ‘J’ memerlukan wang sebanyak $20,000 bagi menjalani pembedahan pemindahan tulang sumsum. Selepas keluarganya menjual tanah bagi membiayai sebahagian kos tersebut, mereka memohon bantuan MMA melunaskan baki yang berjumlah $9,500. Sungguhpun giat menjalankan kempen mengumpul dana selama empat bulan, jumlah yang diraih masih tidak mencukupi. Beliau masih memerlukan tokokan $2,353.87 daripada SSF. Pada akhirnya, ‘J’ meninggal dunia. Balunya menerima bantuan MMA sebanyak $1,860 bagi melangsaikan hutang dan menyara hidup.
Selain perubatan, dana ini memenuhi keperluan mendesak lain. Misalnya, ada pekerja yang dibuang kerja tanpa mengikut syarat perjanjian, tercedera dan terjerat dalam rangkaian pemerdagangan seks, yang mana wanita dijanjikan kerja bersama syarikat makanan dan minuman (F&B) tetapi dipaksa menjadi pekerja seks. Contoh kes di bawah SSF ialah:
- ‘K’ merupakan pekerja asing asal Bangladesh yang berkhidmat dengan syarikat mengecat bangunan di Singapura. Beliau dibelasah dan dicaci majikan hanya kerana terlambat sampai ke tempat kerja. Dua rakan kerjanya turut mengalami penderaan sama daripada majikan yang sama, bahkan sudah melaporkan perbuatan itu kepada polis. Namun, mereka terus dihantar pulang ke tanah air. Disebabkan itu, ‘K’ memohon bantuan MMA. Pegawai MMA menemaninya ke pihak berkuasa bagi memohon pertukaran tempat kerja. Buat sementara waktu, SSF menghulurkan bantuan menokok kredit telefon dan wang menaiki teksi sekiranya dia perlu melarikan diri dari asrama akibat gangguan dan penderaan lagi.
- ‘L’ juga pekerja asal Bangladesh dan berusia 38 tahun. Pekerja tapak binaan itu cedera tulang pinggul dan kepala akibat terjatuh dari tangga lipat dari ketinggian tiga meter di tempat kerja pada bulan Julai 2023. Selain itu, beliau dan majikan dalam proses menghuraikan pertikaian gaji. Namun, ‘L’ tetap dihantar pulang ke tanah air berdasarkan aduan bahawa beliau tidak menetap di asrama yang sudah diperuntukkan. Hal ini asalnya sudah selesai kerana semua maklum akan kesukarannya memanjat tangga. Sekembalinya ke Bangladesh, ‘L’ menghadapi hutang berjumlah $5,000 bercagarkan rumahnya. Pemiutang mula menuntut bayaran. ‘L’ tidak mampu bekerja semasa menjalani proses pemulihan, malah sedang menunggu huraian kes melibatkan wang pampasan di bawah Akta Pampasan Kecederaan di Tempat Kerja (WICA) Singapura. Beliau bergantung pada sokongan masyarakat supaya boleh terus memiliki rumahnya. ‘L’ menerima bantuan bernilai $1,380 bagi menyara keluarganya sepanjang tiga bulan daripada SSF melalui MMA.
Butiran kes dan pengagihan wang di bawah SSF boleh didapatkan melalui pautan ini.
Sumbangan zakat anda boleh meringankan beban kewangan pekerja begini bahkan mengupayakan mereka berdikari semula. Lebih banyak sumbangan yang dikumpul, maka lebih ramai pekerja yang boleh MMA bantu.
Dana CritiCare Pekerja Asing
Dana CritiCare Pekerja Asing, yang dilancarkan pada bulan Disember 2024, merupakan dana pertama di Singapura pimpinan relawan masyarakat bagi menyokong pekerja yang disahkan menghidapi penyakit kritikal.
Dana tersebut merupakan tindak balas terhadap isu sistemik yang juga cuba dihuraikan kempen #SGMuslims4MigrantWorkers melalui usaha pengumpulan wang zakat sepanjang lapan tahun lalu, khususnya perihal biaya perubatan yang tidak terjamin.
Seperti yang diketengahkan dalam kempen-kempen tahunan kami, segolongan pekerja asing yang sakit mahupun tercedera mungkin tidak mampu mendapatkan rawatan atas pelbagai sebab. Secara rasminya, Singapura sudah menetapkan syarat perlindungan insurans tahunan berjumlah sekurang-kurangnya $60,000 ke atas semua pekerja asing, namun ini tidak termasuk kos rawatan sebagai pesakit luar seperti kemoterapi, ubat-ubatan dan proses diagnosis susulan. Disebabkan itu, pekerja asing mesti membayar kos perubatan tanpa subsidi di hospital-hospital awam. Hal ini bermakna pekerja asing yang bergaji rendah dan eksekutif ekspatriat yang bergaji tinggi tidak dibezakan semasa dirawat sehingga kos rawatan terus mencanak. Akibatnya, pekerja asing yang sakit teruk lazimnya dibuang kerja dan dihantar pulang ke tanah air.
Sepanjang beberapa tahun ini, #SGMuslims4MigrantWorkers tekal mengumpul dana, misalnya menerusi Tabung Perpaduan (SSF), demi membolehkan pekerja asing yang terjejas mendapatkan rawatan. Kami mahu mempertingkat usaha ini dengan menyokong pula Dana CritiCare serta menyertai lembaga penyelarasnya demi membantu pekerja yang memerlukan.
Dana CritiCare menyediakan bantuan kewangan khusus membiayai kos rawatan, proses diagnosis dan lain-lain. Terkini, mereka sudah meninjau keperluan 26 pekerja asing (sembilan pembantu rumah manakala 17 lagi daripada bidang pembinaan, kelautan dan pemprosesan) dan meluluskan pengagihan dana berjumlah $36,325 kepada tujuh penerima.
Antara penerima bantuan itu ialah:
- ‘B’, pembantu rumah berusia 51 tahun, memerlukan dana bagi menjalani pengimbasan PET agar diagnosis barahnya lebih tepat.
- ‘R’, pembantu rumah berusia 53 tahun, harus menjalani proses diagnosis susulan ekoran barahnya.
- ‘N’, pekerja asing tapak binaan berusia 46 tahun, disahkan menghidapi Limfoma Hodgkin tahap ketiga.
- ‘L’, pembantu rumah berusia 29 tahun, disahkan menghidapi barah pangkal rahim tahap kedua.
- ‘M’, tukang bersih berusia 38 tahun, terpaksa dipotong kakinya akibat kemalangan jalan raya yang teruk.
- ‘BA’, pekerja tapak binaan berusia 54 tahun, disahkan menghidapi kerosakan fungsi ginjal, dengan risiko kerosakan penuh yang tinggi.
- ‘NZ’, pekerja tapak binaan berusia 40 tahun, menghidapi barah pada darahnya.
Semua permohonan akan diteliti. Pasukan urus setia relawan menerima dan menilai setiap permohonan daripada pekerja dan majikan. Setelah itu, barisan kes akan dibentangkan kepada lembaga bebas yang merangkumi anggota daripada pelbagai latar belakang seperti doktor, pegawai insurans, pegawai pengambilan pekerja asing dan wakil-wakil masyarakat. Keputusan akan dibuat bersandarkan muafakat lembaga mengikut keperluan dan sumber yang tersedia. Semua kes yang diketengahkan kepada orang ramai turut menggunakan nama samaran bagi melindungi maruah dan privasi pekerja serta keluarga masing-masing.
Selain mengumpul dana dan menguruskan kes, Dana CritiCare mahu menghimpunkan data dan pemahaman agar mampu mencetuskan rombakan sistemik, misalnya merangsang penciptaan produk insurans berkumpulan yang menawarkan perlindungan lebih baik dan merancakkan perbincangan mengenai penjagaan pesakit luar dalam kalangan pekerja asing berpenyakit kritikal.
Penyakit seperti serangan jantung dan angin ahmar, barah dan kencing manis menjadi antara punca kematian utama pekerja asing di Singapura. Mereka lebih berisiko tinggi menghadapi penyakit yang tiada kaitan dengan kerja ekoran keadaan penginapan dan pekerjaan yang teruk serta tiadanya pemeriksaan kesihatan, tahap penjagaan dan perubatan wajar.
Sungguhpun sudah menggadaikan usia dan kesihatan demi pembangunan negara kita, ramai daripada pekerja asing ini tidak mampu mendapatkan rawatan secukupnya tatkala perlu.
Sokongan anda pada bulan Ramadan ini mampu memastikan lebih ramai pekerja ini meraih rawatan yang baik sekali gus mencetuskan reformasi berkekalan pada masa hadapan, insya-Allah.