Big Spring Herald Weekend

Dominican sugar imports tied to forced labor rejected by US

- By DÁNICA COTO

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — The U.S. government announced Wednesday that it will detain all imports of sugar and related products made in the Dominican Republic by Central Romana Corporatio­n, Ltd. amid allegation­s that it uses forced labor.

A U.S. Customs and Border Protection investigat­ion found that the company allegedly isolated workers, withheld wages, fostered abusive working and living conditions and pushed for excessive overtime, the agency said in a news release.

“Manufactur­ers like Central

Romana, who fail to abide by our laws, will face consequenc­es as we root out these inhumane practices from U.S. supply chains,” said Annmarie Highsmith with the CBP'S Office of Trade.

A spokeswoma­n for the company did not immediatel­y return a text message seeking comment. Central Romana, which has long faced those types of accusation­s, is the Dominican Republic's largest sugar producer in an industry that exports more than $100 million worth of products to the U.S. every year.

One of Central Romana's owners is the Florida-based Fanjul Corp.

The announceme­nt was cheered by activists who have long decried the treatment of tens of thousands of workers who live and work on sprawling sugarcane fields, many of them Haitian migrants or descendant­s of them.

“This is needed to improve their situation,” Roudy Joseph, a labor rights activist in the Dominican Republic, said in a phone interview. “We've been asking for improvemen­ts for decades.”

The Associated Press last year visited several sugarcane fields owned by Central Romana where workers complained about a lack of wages, being forced to live in

cramped housing that lacked water and restrictiv­e rules including not being allowed to grow a garden to feed their families since transporta­tion to the nearest grocery store miles away was too costly.

Joseph noted that at least 6,000 workers also are demanding pensions for which they paid dues but that were suspended by Dominican President Luis Abinader.

Sugarcane workers also have organized several protests this year to demand permanent residencie­s after working for decades in the Dominican Republic, which is now cracking down on Haitian migrants under Abinader in a move that has drawn heavy internatio­nal criticism.

Central Romana produced nearly 400,000 tons (363,000 metric tons) of sugar in the harvest period that ended last year after grinding more than 3.4 million tons (3 million metric tons) of cane, according to the company.

Wednesday's announceme­nt comes after the U.S. Department of Labor in September placed sugarcane from the Dominican Republic on its list of goods produced by children or via forced labor. The U.S. State Department also has cited the Dominican

Republic in its report on human traffickin­g.

A group of U.S. legislator­s who visited the country issued a statement in July saying workers lived in settlement­s, or bateyes, “under harsh and substandar­d conditions” and that some “described being directed to stay quiet and not speak to anyone about their conditions before our visit.”

The congressio­nal delegation also noted that Central Romana had started to make improvemen­ts, but that “despite this, a culture of fear appears to permeate the industry, where company supervisor­s, armed guards, and officials from an unrepresen­tative union monitor workers both in the fields and in the bateyes.”

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