Burmese Cowboy

Burmese Cowboy: The Shwe Tun Aung Story | Texas Labor News
Texas AFL-CIO Spotlight AAPI Heritage Month May 2026

Burmese Cowboy: How Shwe Aung Defies Borders to Guard the Texas Gulf Coast

Faced with global blacklists, imprisonment, and exile, the Burmese organizer found political asylum in America—only to take his fight straight back to the ocean terminals of Texas.

TX

Texas Labor News Bureau

Special Editorial Feature

AAPI Heritage Month Shwe Aung Poster by Texas AFL-CIO
PHOTO: Official Texas AFL-CIO commemorative poster celebrating AAPI Heritage Month and the journey of Shwe Aung.

The massive container ships that line the horizon of the Texas Gulf Coast carry ninety percent of global trade, but they also mask one of the world's most vulnerable labor forces. Underneath the flag-of-convenience registrations of multinational conglomerates, merchant mariners operate in profound isolation. For years, one man has dedicated his life to penetrating that silence.

His name is Shwe Aung, a veteran union activist whose unyielding pursuit of maritime justice is now immortalized in the documentary, "Burmese Cowboy: The Shwe Tun Aung Story".

The Underground Crucible

Early in his maritime career, Shwe Aung observed firsthand how systemic wage-theft flourished in deep international waters. Shipowners routinely double-booked crew logbooks, paying Burmese workers fractions of the legal minimums promised on paper. Standing up for these workers meant putting his life on the line.

Working alongside the International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF), Shwe Aung coordinated a network of underground resistance, helping to recover millions of dollars in stolen back-wages. The shipping cartels responded with swift, authoritarian violence. Aung was blacklisted across global ports and faced detention and severe imprisonment if he remained in Burma.

"They sought to make an example out of me so other seafarers would accept starvation wages. But solidarity isn't something you can easily switch off once it's inside your blood."

A New Shield on the Texas Gulf

After being granted asylum in the United States, Shwe Aung transitioned his defense work into a new harbor. Armed with rigorous safety and legal training, he qualified as an official ITF inspector representing the Seafarers International Union (SIU).

Today, his daily battlefield spans the docks of Houston, Galveston, and Corpus Christi. Aung steps aboard high-tonnage cargo freighters to verify that international treaties, crew safety protections, and fair wage rules are met. Whether auditing onboard galley provisions in scorching summer heat or filing federal complaints against corrupt captains, he ensures that foreign-born crews never have to stand alone on American soil.

Why AAPI Heritage Month Remembers the Fight

During Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, Shwe Aung’s story is a vivid reminder that labor rights are deeply intertwined with the immigrant experience. From Filipino farmworkers to Asian maritime engineers, the backbone of American logistics relies on international diversity.

As a Texas AFL-CIO Executive Board member, Shwe Aung brings this voice directly to the state's highest policy debates, advocating for inclusive union pipelines and unyielding community support. This month, and every month, we stand in absolute gratitude for his unwavering vigilance.

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