http://peoplesworld.org/eyewitness-describes-brutality-in-tobacco-fields/by: Blake Deppe
October 28 2011
When Brenda Loya, of AFL-CIO Media Affairs, traveled along with 25 students, activists, and labor leaders to Dudley, N.C., she became a witness to the atrocious environment and conditions of the tobacco farm workers.
Loya said of the experience, "We drove 40 minutes into the country to visit labor camps where farm workers live while they harvest tobacco to supply companies like RJ Reynolds, one of the richest corporations in U.S. agriculture - in fact, one of the largest tobacco corporations in the world, with annual profits of over $2 billion.
"What we saw was never to be imagined. When the work day ends, farm workers - men, women, and children - returned to grim camps, often overcrowded shacks once considered chicken coops and horse stables. They are housed in conditions that clearly violate internationally recognized living standards.
"We saw mattresses that were dirty, wet from the leaky roof, or missing entirely. Workers shared stories about infestations of bedbugs, roaches, and other vermin. We saw nonfunctional showers and toilets. Workers endure these inhumane conditions in fear of losing the jobs that they desperately need to provide for their families - jobs," she noted, "with sub-poverty wages that threaten their lives on a daily basis."
Two things common among these workers, according to a recent report by In These Times, are a sense of responsibility that urges them to endure these conditions because they have to support their families, and a great sense of fear of arrest and deportation. The latter of these themes is what causes them to be apprehensive about forming a union. Each of these workers' traits is in turn exploited by the tobacco industry.
FULL story at link.