Andalusia: the slaves of the market gardener of Europe
A sub-Saharan worker in a greenhouse in Almeria, Andalusia, in March 2019 (illustrative image).
© AP Photo / Emilio Morenatti
By: Noémie Lehouelleur
1 min
Modern slavery: it is the Spanish Minister of Labor who uses this expression when she mentions these Moroccans, Senegalese, Malians or migrants from Eastern Europe who came to work in the greenhouses in the south of the country, in Andalusia precisely.
Publicity
(Replay of September 10, 2020)
Melons, watermelons, peppers, strawberries and tomatoes are grown there in the middle of winter.
These agricultural workers would be nearly 100,000 to work in greenhouses, of which at least a third would be undocumented, according to the Andalusian agricultural union, underpaid, exploited, crammed in slums.
A report by
Noémie Lehouelleur
.
Newsletter
Receive all the international news directly in your mailbox
I subscribe
Follow all the international news by downloading the RFI application
google-play-badge_FR
Spain
Agriculture and Fishing
Human rights
Immigration
On the same subject
Spain: the puzzle for Moroccan migrants and seasonal workers to return home
Spain: the treatment of migrant and seasonal workers is controversial