USA TODAY US Edition

Backpacker­s face exploitati­on in Australia

Many foreigners abused by unscrupulo­us farmers

- Lauren Williams

SYDNEY – The popular program is promoted as a cultural exchange: Young and adventurou­s travelers can experience Australia’s wild outback, while farmers gain much needed agricultur­al labor.

In reality, the 88-day working holiday has turned into a living nightmare for thousands of backpacker­s being exploited and abused by unscrupulo­us farmers.

Many find themselves in debt, forced to pay rent for weeks at hostels while waiting for work that never arrives. Others are injured or fear for their lives, forced to operate dangerous machinery without training. Many report underpayme­nt. Some report sexual assault. And accommodat­ions often are appalling.

The largely unregulate­d industry often operates in remote locations without phone service or Internet connection­s.

Andrea Argiolas, 22, of Pinerolo, Italy, said he worked two weeks on a peach farm in Shepparton in northern Victoria, Australia. He paid $175 a week in rent at a hostel and was promised he could earn $31 per half-ton bin picking the fruit. He was never paid, then told there was no more work.

“After that I went to Mildura to pick grapes. The pay looked good, but after two weeks working nine-hour days I received my pay slip. It was $300,” he said. “I was sleeping in my car. I decided to leave. I couldn’t do that.”

These working hostels coordinate with farmers to supply laborers. But when backpacker­s arrive, they are told to pay a bond and rent in advance, then spend weeks waiting for work.

“I traveled to Ayr, Queensland, after being reassured on the phone there was plenty of work for me. There was a bed reserved for me and rent was $160 a week,” said one backpacker who was not named in a written submission to a parliament­ary inquiry into adopting what’s called a Modern Slavery Act.

“Upon arrival was told of the $300 bond needed in cash and explained the rules, including a fee of $10 a day to drive you to the farm. Was then told it could take a while for there to be work available to me, worst case two weeks waiting,” the backpacker wrote.

“After speaking to people I was told I would more than likely be here for more than three months. Some had been there for almost half a year as the work is spread out to a couple of days a week to keep you there for much longer paying full rent.”

Australia has more than 134,000 farming businesses that employ more than 307,000 people, according to the National Farmers Federation.

In peak season, “backpacker­s make up about a third of the workforce,” said Ben Rogers, a federation spokesman. “The labor shortage is a serious issue for the sector and is heavily reliant on seasonable labor and particular­ly backpacker­s.”

Rogers said abuse of the backpacker­s also damages “brand Australia.”

“We want this dealt with, too. It discourage­s people from going out and doing the work when there is a desperate need for it.” But he said the overall program “is a positive experience for many.”

The parliament­ary inquiry has heard dozens of grievances from foreign workers, collected by British mother Rosie Ayliff after her daughter, Mia Ayliff, 21, was stabbed to death last year by a French backpacker at a hostel in the remote township of Home Hill in far north Queensland.

The young woman’s mother has campaigned since then for changing the system. Hearings for the inquiry ended Oct. 30, and a final report will to go parliament before Christmas.

Under the program, backpacker­s wishing to extend their one-year working visa for an extra year are required to complete 88 days of agricultur­al labor in rural areas that experience chronic shortages of people willing to work in the harsh conditions.

Rachel MacKenzie of Growcom, Queensland’s main organizati­on for horticultu­re producers, said, “We have zero tolerance for unethical or illegal behavior. There are good protection­s in place for workers. But in horticultu­re, workers are vulnerable. It can’t be denied that the work is hard. ... But the backpacker­s get to go places they otherwise would never have seen.”

Alex Bell, 19, from Brighton, England, said she left her job picking sweet potatoes for 10 hours a day in remote Atherton after the farmer made sexual advances toward her.

“I came to Australia after I finished school for a new experience, to travel, to see as much of this country as possible,” she said. “The farmer was really inappropri­ate with all the girls. He would come up behind me and rub against me, or hold my hands while I was packing.”

Andrea Rochi, 30, from Milan, said the work was grueling but necessary for the privilege to stay in Australia.

“At the end of the day, no one is holding a gun to your head,” he said.

“It discourage­s people from going out and doing the work when there is a desperate need for it.” Ben Rogers National Farmers Federation spokesman

 ??  ?? A German backpacker prepares to board a bus for a trip to the outback in Darwin, Australia. Many work long days with little or no pay. IAN WALDIE/GETTY IMAGES
A German backpacker prepares to board a bus for a trip to the outback in Darwin, Australia. Many work long days with little or no pay. IAN WALDIE/GETTY IMAGES
 ??  ?? A worker harvests grapes in the Yarra Valley region of Greater Melbourne, Australia. CARLA GOTTGENS/BLOOMBERG VIA GETTY IMAGES
A worker harvests grapes in the Yarra Valley region of Greater Melbourne, Australia. CARLA GOTTGENS/BLOOMBERG VIA GETTY IMAGES

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