"They suck the
blood out of people.’ – Lettuce picker
Salads and vegetables in UK supermarkets are grown by
migrant farmworkers who are underpaid, treated like slaves, forced to subsist
in filthy conditions and regularly develop health problems associated with
pesticides, by a Channel 4 News investigation suggests. Many live in dirty,
makeshift shacks constructed from plastic sheeting and wood close to the fields
they tend in southern Spain. They are hired by agencies to produce and prepare
the vegetables and salads consumers see on supermarket shelves across Britain. Some
farm workers say they are forced to work in the vicinity of noxious pesticides,
which cause respiratory illnesses such as bronchitis and sinus problems. Others
say they are regularly underpaid. Migrant workers who produce vegetables
exported to the UK said they are forced to work in unsanitary conditions and
must use bushes close to where vegetables grow as a toilet. But with high
unemployment in Spain, many migrant workers are still desperate to earn a
living.
Critics say competition sparked by Lidl and Aldi’s low
prices have prompted supermarkets in Britain to engage in exploitative
practices in a bid to slash the cost of their produce. All major UK
supermarkets are compelled to promote workers’ rights under a worldwide
initiative known as the Ethical Trading Initiative. Nevertheless, agricultural
firms, which supply vegetables and salad to Waitrose, Marks & Spencer,
Sainsbury’s, Tesco and Asda are implicated in the allegations uncovered by
Channel 4. Employment agencies who supply much of the seasonal casual labour
are less than rigorous about maintaining ethical standards. Agroherni – a large
firm, which sells £22 million worth of herbs, salads and vegetables annually to
leading supermarkets in Britain such as Asda, Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Waitrose and
Marks & Spencer - states in its annual accounts for 2010 that it has saved
on staff costs by "outsourcing" staff rather than employing them
directly.
Conservative MP Richard Drax, a former member of the
Environment and Rural Affairs Select Committee, said: “If true, these
allegations are appalling. It sounds like effectively slave labor producing
food in 2015 which is utterly unacceptable describing the evidence uncovered by
Channel 4. Fellow Conservative Neil Parish, who currently serves on the
committee, was unsurprised by Channel 4 News’ findings. “There is always a
price to pay for cheap imported food; whether it is poor quality, low animal
welfare standards or, in this case, the appalling treatment of workers,” he
said.
Channel 4’s allegations focus specifically on workers based
in Muricia and Almeria in southern Spain. Each year, millions of pounds worth
of salad and vegetables are exported to Britain from these regions. Farm labourers
for one company, located in Almeria, didn’t complain because their names would
be added to a blacklist known as “the list of rotten sardines.” Workers say
they are forced to work overtime but often not paid for it and if they refuse
they are sometimes blacklisted.
Channel 4 News’
investigation highlighted concerns about laborers for Agroherni. Under EU laws
it is illegal for pickers to be in close proximity to pesticide machines as
they work. But Channel 4 News filmed dozens of people working in the same field
while chemicals were being sprayed. One
ex-employee said she was left in horrific pain and required multiple operations
on her sinuses, which were aggravated by working in fields where pesticides were
routinely sprayed. The woman added: “All that matters to them is fulfilling
their clients’ orders. They do not care.” Another worker was rushed to hospital
after breathing in fumes. He was signed off by a doctor with bronchitis caused
by exposure to pesticides. The following day he was fired by the employment
agency Integra Empleo. Workers and unions in the region say exposure to
pesticides is common across the industry in southern Spain and is not confined
to one company.
Agroherni sources its workers from an employment agency
called Integra Empleo, but the laborers claim the agency regularly fails to pay
them. One worker said if staff work 26 days, the agency notes this period as 16
or 18 days – deducting up to eight days salary in the process. A worker claimed
he had worked 22 days in one month, but was only paid for 17. When he
complained, he says he was told: "You've been paid the amount of money you
deserve. If you think that's not enough then you can leave." One lettuce
picker told the programme: "They suck the blood out of people. You work
for two or four months and then they sack you without severance, without
payment, without anything. If we work 26 days, they write down 16 or 18. They
always steal seven or eight days. It's not right."
There are now more than 40 employment agencies supplying
labour to farm growers in the Murcia region and trade unions say abuse of
workers' rights is rife. Earlier this year, 5,000 of them turned out to
demonstrate on the streets. Local politicians say the problem is widespread
across the industry. In the Murcia Regional Assembly, Pujante Diekman of the
left coalition IU party said: "I believe that some of the working
conditions are similar to slavery in some cases, and I have been able to verify
that myself. I have seen it with my own eyes. This is an economy that can be
described as slavery or semi-slavery, where workers have been cheated by cold
blooded people, by people who have broken the law, plain and simple."
Having just reread John Steinbeck's 'Grapes of Wrath' (highly recommended) this account of current day conditions for field workers replays the conditions he wrote about in the US almost a century ago when large agricultural businesses were forcing small farmers in the midwest from their holdings and thousands, losing their homes and livelihoods had to flee their area. They flocked to California with hopes of working for a livable wage as fruit pickers or other work on the land. They found conditions as described in Spain, inadequate living areas, wages insufficient to support a family, even with all working, wages withheld and wage reductions or eviction in favour of those in even more dire straits arriving daily to take their place.
ReplyDeleteThis is how capitalism worked, continues to work, and will go on working - against the working class and for the capitalist class, until and unless we of the working class collectively decide to take things into our own hands and overturn the system as a whole in favour of socialism.