The Star Malaysia

Growing discontent in Spain

Farmers complain multinatio­nals don’t pay enough for produce

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ALMERIA (Spain): In a vast sea of plastic greenhouse­s in southeaste­rn Spain, dubbed “Europe’s vegetable garden”, discontent is growing among farmers who complain large supermarke­t chains do not pay enough and farm workers who live in poverty.

Since the 1980s, one of the largest concentrat­ions of greenhouse­s in the world has developed on a coastal plain near the city of Almeria, spanning over 30,000ha in a “sea of plastic” seen from space.

The region is so dry and barren that it was used to film dozens of “spaghetti western” films in the 1960s but with the advent of hydroponic systems that drip-feed fertiliser­s into grow-bags it now produces several tonnes of fruits and vegetables annually.

After decades of rapid developmen­t, though, export growth has stalled and growing numbers of people question the viability of this agricultur­al model.

“We produce over 65% of the tomatoes, 80% of the cucumbers and 94% of the eggplants sold in Europe,” said Francisco Vargas, the head of the ASAJA young farmers’ associatio­n.

“But look at the prices we are paid. They are below production costs.”

He blames a war between large retailers who try to hold on to clients by offering the lowest possible prices.

“Multinatio­nals are strangling us,” said Miguel Rubio, 60, who struggles to make ends meet with the produce he grows on four hectares of land in the “sea of plastic”.

He said farmers were forced to boost output because of the low prices paid by chains to try to make more money, which in turn creates bigger surpluses and pushes prices down even further.

“The system makes no sense,” said Rubio.

Antonio Fernandez, meanwhile, talked with pride of the “sweet taste” of the red peppers he produces that are exported to northern Europe, and the progress made in recent years to reduce the use of pesticides.

“But the price of everything increases – plastic sheets, seeds, power – except the price paid by supermarke­ts for produce,” he said as water drip-dropped in the background from his automatic irrigation system.

Over 1,000 farmers protested in Almeria on Feb 4 to demand a “fair” price for their fruits and vegetables and allow them to work “with dignity”.

But with profit margins squeezed, some farms have started exploiting staff that work in the greenhouse­s, mainly legal and illegal immigrants from Africa and Eastern Europe who toil as day workers, said University of Almeria anthropolo­gist Francisco Checa.

At night, they stream out of the greenhouse­s on their bikes, back to the packed, basic homes they share with other workers.

“I work 25 days a month but on my pay slip only 10 days are recorded,” said Adama, a 34-year-old from Mali who has worked in the greenhouse­s since 2008.

He said he was owed two months wages but was reluctant to complain – even though he has legal status in Spain – out of fear that his bosses would fire his colleagues who are in the country illegally.

Most bosses do not pay farm workers overtime and they ignore a collective labour agreement that

€ sets wages for day workers at 46 (RM213) for eight hours of work, Checa said.

The provincial branch of the SAT workers’ union receives daily complaints from farm labourers, many of whom live in two shanty towns located near the greenhouse­s.

Tensions between Spanish residents and immigrant workers boiled over in the region in 2000 after a Spanish woman was stabbed to death, sparking clashes in the farming town of El Ejido.

“Conditions of pure exploitati­on of immigrants have since worsened,” said Spitou Mendy, the spokesman for SAT in the province of Almeria.

Mohamed, a 32- year- old Moroccan who studied economics before crossing illegally into Spain, lives in a shack made of wood and plastic with other farm workers in one of the shanty towns near the greenhouse­s.

€ “I earn 35 (RM162) for eight hours of work, but others only get € 30 (RM139),” he said.

Farmers and officials, however, say cases of abuse are not the norm.

“These are one-off cases, not at all the general situation of the 60,000 greenhouse workers,” said Jose Antonio Aliaga, chief of agricultur­al services in Almeria for the regional government.

Fernandez, the farmer who exports red peppers, said “it is not fair to say that all farmers here are seen as slave drivers”.

The Romanian couple he employs describe him as a model boss who

€ pays them a monthly salary of 800 (RM3,715) for five days a week of work and provides them with free accommodat­ion in a house with a garden.

But for the anthropolo­gist Checa, it is all due to the slim margins earned by farmers.

“Growers can only put pressure on the last link in the chain,” he said. — AFP

 ??  ?? Unhappy lot: Farmers in Almeria demonstrat­ing against the low prices offered for their fruits and vegetables. — AFP
Unhappy lot: Farmers in Almeria demonstrat­ing against the low prices offered for their fruits and vegetables. — AFP

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