Desperate Workers On A Factory Farm: 'They Treated Us Like Slaves'
Scorpions and bedbugs. Constant hunger. No pay for months. Finally, a bold escape leads to a government raid, exposing deplorable conditions. But justice proves elusive.
Ricardo Martinez and Eugenia Santiago were desperate. Scorpions and bedbugs. Constant hunger. No pay for months. Finally, a bold escape leads to a government raid, exposing deplorable conditions. But justice proves elusive.
At the labor camp for Bioparques de Occidente, they and other farmworkers slept sprawled head to toe on concrete floors. Their rooms crawled with scorpions and bedbugs. Meals were skimpy, hunger a constant. Camp bosses kept people in line with threats and, when that failed, with their fists.
Escape was tempting but risky. The compound was fenced with barbed wire and patrolled by bosses on all-terrain vehicles. If the couple got beyond the gates, local police could arrest them and bring them back. Then they would be stripped of their shoes...
- Tags:
- Bioparques
- Bioparques de Occidente
- Cecilia Rabassa
- Centro Mexicano para la Filantropia (CEMEFI)
- Eduardo Almaguer Ramirez
- Eduardo De La Vega
- human trafficking
- International Finance Corp. (IFC)
- Jalisco's Secretariat of Labor and Social Welfare
- Juan Ramirez Arrona
- Kaliroy
- Labor relations
- Mexican Agriculture
- Mexican Center for Philanthropy (CEMEFI)
- Minerva Gutierrez
- Wal-Mart
- World Bank (WB)
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