Khaleej Times

Farmers need support to feed growing millions

- Hilal elver & Melissa sHapiro Hilal Elver is United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food. Melissa Shapiro is a consultant to the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, and a former attorney-adviser with the US Environmen­tal Protection Agen

Food is a powerful storytelle­r. Our diet signals whether we cook at home, shop locally, prefer inexpensiv­e dishes, or even think about what we eat. But the consumer side of mealtime is just one of food’s many plot lines. Food has backstorie­s, too, none more unsavoury than this one: agricultur­al workers — the people who make dinner possible — are also the most likely to go to bed hungry.

Every day, some 1.1 billion people — one-third of the global workforce — go to work at the world’s farms. And, every night, many of them return home — having suffered countless violations of their human rights — without enough money to feed themselves or their families.

Farm work is one of the only profession­s in which national legal protection­s are regularly ignored. Minimum wage standards endorsed by the Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on (ILO), and adopted by many industries around the world, remain either unenforced in the agricultur­e sector or do not extend to informal farm workers. But, because migrant labour makes up the bulk of the agricultur­al workforce, this gap in coverage has become a canyon.

In rural parts of developing countries, 80 per cent of farm workers earn less than $1.25 per day, trapping them in poverty. Additional­ly, piece-rate pay schemes force workers to spend hours in extreme weather to meet demanding quotas.

Worst of all, those working on unethical farms do so at high risk. According to the ILO, dangerous machinery, long working hours, and exposure to toxic pesticides makes farm work one of the world’s deadliest jobs; more than 170,000 agricultur­al workers are killed every year on unsafe farms, twice the mortality rate of any other industry.

And yet, agricultur­al work is typically excluded from occupation­al health and safety rules in most countries. Even in the United States, there is no federal law mandating that employers give farm workers breaks for water and shade, even though heatstroke remains a leading cause of work-related farm deaths in the US.

The recent death of Fabián Tomasi, an Argentine farm worker and critic of the agrochemic­al industry in his country, was a reminder of the hazards of industrial­ised agricultur­e. While companies like Monsanto argue that pesticides are necessary to ensure food security, the consequenc­es of chemical exposure to workers like Tomasi — whose body was left twisted and mangled after years of handling chemicals without protection — reveal the human cost of their use. Even in developed countries, acute pesticide poisoning affects one in every 5,000 agricultur­al workers, and countless more employees are exposed to toxins on a daily basis.

Unfortunat­ely, few agricultur­al workers are in a position to advocate for their rights. Seasonal and rural workers lack access to collective bargaining, and undocument­ed migrant workers avoid unions for fear that employers will retaliate by calling the immigratio­n authoritie­s. Moreover, basic benefits such as social security, health care, and workers’ compensati­on are typically nonexisten­t. Exempt from much workplace regulation, this is an industry that can afford to put cost-savings and profits above the wellbeing of employees.

It is time for us to stop passively sticking a fork into what lands on our plates, and use our purchasing power to resist paying the cheapest price for food. Holding people accountabl­e for mistreatin­g farm workers will be challengin­g, but not impossible. We can begin by calling on government­s to spend more time protecting farm workers than investigat­ing their immigratio­n status.

Of course, for this to be possible, we need more informatio­n about where our food comes from. Nowadays, we tend to rely on informatio­nal labels

It is time for us to stop passively sticking a fork into what lands on our plates, and use our purchasing power to resist paying the cheapest price for food.

and certificat­ions to tell us that. But the story they tell is fragmented, incomplete, and at times even misleading. We need to take the extra steps to learn the full story. This means moving beyond voluntary labels declaring that food is produced fairly and humanely to demand mandatory labels that expose non-compliance with these norms.

Worldwide, some 821 million people are undernouri­shed – a figure that continues to increase. This is a tragedy; no one anywhere should have their rights, including the right to food, violated; yet that is exactly what so many farm workers and food-chain workers endure every day.

Fighting for their rights has always been difficult, but if we continue the battle, the story of the global food system may lose some of its bitterness. —Project Syndicate

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